Confusion From Precision Level 3

This itself is an interesting example of a confusion than can arise by putting it in writing that might not arise if we were talking, because we wouldn't notice it. And, if we didn't notice it, then when you get right down to it, we didn't know what we were talking about.

Re: all_all__member_level_4_website_construction__detail.html, Term: fullDomain, aka the complete domain.

Duplcated below for analysis.

Term

fullDomain, aka the complete domain

Definition

As universally accepted. The entire domain specification (in a given context).

Discussion: Notice we say, "in a given context". That is because the fullDomain is not actually a thing unto itself. The word "full" is an a contextual adjective, as apposed to top which as also an adjective, but not contextual.

Consider the example below. You have pages under yourSubSubDomain.edu.aedok.org. But we have pages under edu.aedok.org. In your context and our context, the topDomain is the same, ie., org. But the fullDomains are not the same. In your context, the fullDomain is yourSubSubDomain.edu.aedok.org, whereas In our context, the fullDomain is edu.aedok.org.

Example(s)

edu.aedok.org
yourSubSubDomain.edu.aedok.org