A is forest which consists of domain trees.The trree is defined in the following format
Trees are collections of one or more domains that allow global resource sharing. A tree may consist of a single domain or multiple domains in a contiguous namespace. Adding a domain to a tree becomes a child of the tree root domain. Domain will be called as parent domain to which child domain is attached. A child domain can also have its multiple child domains. Child domain uses the name followed by parent domain name and gets a unique Domain Name System (DNS).
For example, if tech.com is the root domain, you can create one or more Child domains to tech.com such as north.tech.com and or south.tech.com. These "children" may also have child domains created under them, such as sales.north.tech.com.
The domains in a tree have two-way, Kerberos transitive trust relationships. A Kerberos transitive trust simply means that if Domain A trusts Domain B and Domain B trusts Domain C, then Domain A trusts Domain C. Therefore, a domain joining a tree immediately has trust relationships established with every domain in the tree.
forest
"Group" is not a taxonomic rank, such as Life, Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species. The other possible use of "group" is in reference to Cultivar Group, but an Oak Tree is not a Cultivar. Please restate the question.
Apples are grown in orchards, which means they are grown on trees. Trees need to be pruned and fertilized every year in order to produce more apples.
If you are referring to the ".com" or ".net" portion of the domain name, it is called the "top level domain name." Anything in between "www" and the top level domain name is called a secondary domain name.
A domain is a larger and more inclusive category than a kingdom. There are three domain i.e. Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
Olive trees grouped together are considered a grove. A grove is actually a term for groups of various kinds of fruit and nut trees. Some people may refer to them as orchards. Orchard refers more to the land on which the trees of fruits and nuts are grown.
After the "www", the next bit is called "domain name" e.g. in www.exampleweb.com "exampleweb" is the domain name. More specifically it is also called "second-level domain name", the first-level domain name being the "com" at the end.
Windows 7 Professional and Ultimate editions have a feature called Domain Join, which is designed to join a domain quickly and more securely.
Trees are collections of one or more domains that allow global resource sharing. A tree may consist of a single domain or multiple domains in a contiguous namespace. Adding a domain to a tree becomes a child of the tree root domain. Domain will be called as parent domain to which child domain is attached. A child domain can also have its multiple child domains. Child domain uses the name followed by parent domain name and gets a unique Domain Name System ( For example, if tech.com is the root domain, you can create one or more Child domains to tech.com such as north.tech.com and or south.tech.com. These "children" may also have child domains created under them, such as sales.north.tech.com. The domains in a tree have two-way, Kerberos transitive trust relationships. A Kerberos transitive trust simply means that if Domain A trusts Domain B and Domain B trusts Domain C, then Domain A trusts Domain C. Therefore, a domain joining a tree immediately has trust relationships established with every domain in the tree.
How about "forest" or "woods"? Is it too small for that? If so I'd go with "grove" or "cluster", I suppose. :) If it HAS to be one of your two choices, I'd go with group. Hows about a clump.
A group of ten or more kangaroos is called Mob, Troop or Court .
A group of llamas is called a herd. They usually travel in groups of 2 or more. You are welcome.A group of llamas is called a herd.