reassign
If you use Business Mail, you can reassign, or redirect, a user's extra email addresses (or aliases) to someone else in your organization. Learn more.
recalculate
FrontPage's recalculate (recalc) function repairs damaged links in your site and updates FrontPage data that may have become out of sync or malformed. If you're using FrontPage to build and maintain your web site, we recommend recalculating your subwebs periodically to correct potential errors and ensure that your site functions smoothly. Learn more about FrontPage.
redelegate
If you choose to use a domain you already own with your Yahoo! Small Business plan, you must redelegate your domain, or change your domain's hosting information. When you redelegate your domain, you're simply telling the company where you originally bought your domain (such as Network Solutions) to redirect your domain to work with Yahoo!. Please note that redelegation is not the same as a registrar transfer: Yahoo! will host your domain for you, but we don't yet offer the ability to transfer your domain registration. Learn more.
referrer
A referrer to a web page represents the location from which a site visitor arrived at the page. The referrer report available in the Site Statistics feature lists the search engines and keywords your site visitors used to find your page as well as the web addresses of the sites from which they came. You can use this information to gauge the success of your promotion efforts and fine-tune your marketing strategy. Learn more.
root
Root refers to the highest level of an organizational hierarchy, and is commonly used to specify the main directory of a site or application. The root directory of your web site contains your home page and any folders (subdirectories) you may have created. Your domain name — such as widgetdesigns.com — represents the root directory of your site. You can access your subdirectories by appending the path of the subdirectory name to the root, such as widgetdesigns.com/subdirectory1/ or widgetdesigns.com/subdirectory1/subdirectory2/.
root web
A root web is the top-level directory of a web site created with FrontPage, the main folder that contains all of your web site's files. The root web of your AT&T Yahoo! Web Hosting site is protected by your Yahoo! user name and password and can contain many subwebs. You can protect your root web by creating subwebs and restricting other users' access to those areas. Learn more.
RSS
RSS (Really Simple Syndication) is a format used to distribute headlines and similar content across the Internet. Owners of blogs and other web sites that update their content frequently can make their new posts and content available in files called RSS feeds, which consumers can receive and review in a newsreader, such as My Yahoo!, making it easier and faster to keep up with new information on their favorite sites. Your blog tools all make it easy to create and distribute an RSS feed for your blog. Learn more about RSS.