Welcome to the candy shop, where we are your 1 stop shop. So many sweets, everything your heart's desire, today we have a sale on cinnamon sticks with XFCE flavor in the middle.

Welcome to the candy shop, where we are your 1 stop shop. So many sweets, everything your heart's desire, today we have a sale on cinnamon sticks with XFCE flavor in the middle.

Just watch out for Snaps in that sweet shop, they are really bad for your teeth. 
Yes. You would need to know the exact name of it, though. Do you remember each name of each .deb you have installed? The above keeps a record, allowing easy access and removal.
I understand the aesthetic side - I theme mine out to make it look good. But, what matters more? Functional, stable complete control? Or something looking kinda nice (If not minimalistic which is not a good thing) but not stably working?
No need to remember if I install telegram and if you don't know the name, you just sudo apt search telegram and you should be able to see telegram-desktop.
Well I'm not a DEBY DOWNER, so I for one am for DEB. 
The best option would be to install synaptic package manager. Go to the software store and search for it or type into the terminal sudo apt install synaptic. There you can search for apps and packages, select them and update/uninstall them. That is going to ALL packages, so you actually know what is installed. In the terminal you would most likely only be able to uninstall what you know how it is called and so on. So you should try synaptic.
So you found a power of Synaptics.
That is the only way my husband install apps he needs.
Basically everyone who has used ubuntu based distro for a month uses it. If they don't, there using the terminal. Nobody is gonna use a store that looks good but sucks at its job.
Now, remembering I am new to Linux-speak, what exactly is Gnome? Is it integral to the use of Zorin? Can it be replaced with something else inside Zorin, and if so, what why and how?
As Tom put it earlier, Linux comes with options, unlike Windows. Which can be Overwhelming.
When you boot your computer up and log in, you are greeted with certain things: A panel (Otherwise a Toolbar, Taskbar or whatever name you want to call it), a Window Manger and a File manager. There is a background, which you can adorn with a wallpaper, but also offers a Right Click functional menu.
That is your Desktop Environment.
In Microsoft world, that is Windows.
On Linux, there are many different environments you can choose from, all with different features. Many work differently from the others. I am well versed in all of them... Except KDE. I cannot seem to wrap my head around KDE. I have tried and tried.
But the rest are:
XFCE
Cinnamon
Mate
LXQT
LXDE
Gnome
...and there are many other independent smaller ones.
The Desktop Environments employ different Window Managers. Window managers govern a lot more than you might thing. The mouse cursor, the windows themselves, the borders, the wallpaper...
Each Desktop Environment and each Window manager can all be replaced and none is absolutely integral.
I have installed and Used on Zorin OS:
Enlightenment D.E.
Cinnamon D.E.
Mate D.E.
And am currently using XFCE mostly.
When you first dive in - Overwhelming. But it becomes second nature going from one to the other very quickly. Before long it's just... chocolate, rocky road, vanilla, pralines and cream...
Depends on how far you are willing to go and how you define "Zorin OS" 
You can remove Gnome D.E. from Zorin OS, as long as you replace the integrated components with something else.
But for a fresh new user, just installing the common files is really all they need (or usually want) to worry about.
Ok in Gnu/Linux you can basically change whatever you want. Gnome is basically the desktop of Zorin OS Core, XFCE is the desktop of Zorin OS Lite both are different and have their pros and cons.
For me, it really was the first month to month and a half on Linux (Zorin OS) that really battered me.
The sailing started getting a lot smoother once I got past that "overwhelm" hurdle.
Zorin OS opened up a world to me in a way. Before that, a computer was a mysterious machine that did whatever it wanted to with me poking suggestions at it from time to time.
Within that first 6 months of using Zorin OS, I installed it on the Garage Shop machine and soon had it stripped down and modified for diagnosing cars.
Due to Linux, I have been learning javascript, sql, css and more. And now I even am taking classes on it.
It feels like Windows had me trapped in this cell, and Zorin OS did a jailbreak.
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