So just to help a little bit without getting too technical…
df -h
is your friend to find out which physical drive or partition relates to which directory (called the “mount point”)
If you want, you can set up each drive/partition to be mounted a bit Windows-esque.
For example:
- Drive 1, partition 1 will almost certainly be root
/
- But drive 1, partition 2 can be mounted to:
/mnt/d/
- And then drive 1, partition 3 can be mounted to:
/mnt/e/
And so on.
You’ll need to look up fstab
to understand how to do that.
I understand it’s tricky to get your head around initially as I felt exactly the same coming from Windows to Linux.
Once you get your head around partitions being able to be mounted anywhere, it actually becomes really handy
Same thing but put slightly differently: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4K5fbQ1-zps