It is a relative cell reference.
It is a relative cell reference.
It is a relative cell reference.
It is a relative cell reference.
It is a relative cell reference.
It is a relative reference.
It is a reference in one workbook to a cell or range in another workbook. So the reference is outside, or external to, the current workbook. To do it involves having the name of the workbook in square brackets, then the name of the sheet, then an exclamation mark and then the cell reference. So it could be something like this: =[Invoices.xlsx]Sheet3!C14
It is a relative cell reference.
B12 is a relative reference.
The Name Box. If you type in a cell reference in the Name Box, and press Enter, it will bring you to that cell. You can also press F5 to open the Goto dialog box and use that to go to a particular cell too.
An absolute reference.
A relative reference.
C is not a cell reference. C is a column reference, but you would need a row number to add to it to make a cell reference, like C2 or C35 or C527 etc.