Cloud computing
Using computing resources like servers, storage, databases, networking, and software over the internet instead of owning and managing everything yourself.
Cloud glossary
Cloud exams often feel harder because the vocabulary is unfamiliar. This glossary explains common Azure and cloud concepts in plain English so the words start matching real scenarios.
How to use this glossary
For AZ-900 and other cloud fundamentals exams, many questions test whether you can tell similar terms apart. Pay special attention to pairs like IaaS vs. PaaS, scalability vs. elasticity, authentication vs. authorization, and region vs. availability zone.
Glossary
Using computing resources like servers, storage, databases, networking, and software over the internet instead of owning and managing everything yourself.
Cloud services offered by a provider like Microsoft Azure and shared across many customers while keeping each customer logically separated.
Cloud-style infrastructure dedicated to one organization, often used when control, compliance, or legacy requirements are strict.
A setup that connects on-premises systems, private cloud, and public cloud resources so they can work together.
Using cloud services from more than one provider, such as Azure plus another public cloud.
Glossary
Infrastructure as a Service. You rent virtual machines, storage, and networking while still managing the operating system, apps, and data.
Platform as a Service. You focus on deploying apps while the cloud provider handles more of the operating system, runtime, and infrastructure management.
Software as a Service. You use a complete application over the internet, such as email or collaboration software, without managing the underlying platform.
A cloud model where you run code or workflows without managing servers directly. You usually pay based on executions or usage.
Glossary
A dedicated Microsoft Entra ID instance for an organization. It stores users, groups, apps, and identity settings.
A billing and management boundary for Azure resources. Resources are created inside subscriptions.
A logical container used to organize related Azure resources so they can be managed together.
A higher-level container used to organize multiple subscriptions and apply governance at scale.
A geographic area containing Azure datacenters where resources can be deployed.
A physically separate datacenter location within an Azure region, used to improve resiliency.
Glossary
The ability to increase or decrease resources to meet demand.
Scaling resources automatically or quickly as demand changes, often scaling back down when demand drops.
Designing systems so they continue working with minimal downtime.
The ability for a system to keep working when a component fails.
Planning and technology used to restore services after a major outage or disaster.
Service Level Agreement. A provider commitment about uptime or service availability, often expressed as a percentage.
Glossary
Proving who you are, usually with a username, password, multifactor authentication, or another identity method.
Determining what an authenticated user, app, or service is allowed to access.
Microsoft’s cloud identity and access management service, formerly called Azure Active Directory.
Role-Based Access Control. A way to grant permissions based on roles assigned to users, groups, or service principals.
The security model where Microsoft secures the cloud infrastructure while customers remain responsible for things like data, identities, and configuration choices.
Rules used to enforce or audit requirements across Azure resources, such as allowed regions or required tags.
Meeting legal, regulatory, or organizational requirements for security, privacy, data handling, and operations.
Glossary
Capital expenditure. Spending money upfront on assets like servers and datacenters.
Operational expenditure. Ongoing spending for services as they are used, common in cloud billing.
A pricing model where you pay for what you use instead of buying fixed capacity upfront.
Azure tools for monitoring, analyzing, budgeting, and optimizing cloud spending.
Collecting metrics, logs, and alerts so teams can understand the health and performance of systems.
Name-value labels applied to Azure resources to help organize costs, ownership, environments, or departments.
Independent training note
WebLizard Labs is independent training content. Microsoft, Azure, and related certification names belong to Microsoft. Use this glossary as a plain-English companion, and check Microsoft Learn for official product documentation and exam details.