A domain name is an easy-to-remember and unique website address which you'll be able to get for your website. It routes a numeric IP address that is applied to identify websites as well as devices on the World Wide Web but it is rather easy to remember or share. Each and every domain name includes two different parts - the name that you choose plus the extension. To give an example, in domain.com, “domain” is called Second-Level Domain and it's the part you'll be able to choose, and “.com” is the extension, which is referred to as Top-Level Domain (TLD). You are able to obtain your domain through any accredited registrar company or transfer an active one between registrars when the extension can support this feature. This type of a transfer does not change the ownership of your domain name; the sole thing that changes is the place where you will be able to control that domain name. The majority of the domain name extensions are open for registration by every entity, however numerous country-code extensions have specific prerequisites for instance local presence or a current business registration.