I think the new term-de-jour is 'Web-Stack' because the you now need a LAMP and several LED's.
Used to be that LAMP was the acronym that put a nice tidy bow on the open-source-community' web-stack options.
i.e: LAMP:
- Linux
- Apache
- MySQL
- Python || Perl || PHP.
- python == mod_python, and mod_wsgi... which gives you django, turbogears, web2py, etc.
- perl == mod_perl, which gives you Catalyst, Mason etc.
- PHP == Zend, Yii
These were considered to be the 'Open-Source-Community' stack, and a tidy acronym L-A-M-P
summed it up nicely. Now I think you have to add 2 alternatives to the dbms slot. SQLite && PostgreSQL, also there is a glaring absence from the application stack language slot, as you pointed out. Ruby-on-Rails.
Finally I feel obligated to point out that this space has grown alot:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_web_application_frameworks
With the advent of Web 2.0 and additional necessities in the env like XMPP or AMQP.
The term L-A-M-P has been replace with the more generic Web-Stack.
I highly encourage you to investigate the user-community size before embarking into the web-stack journey. Also remember when the term L-A-M-P was coined the 'explosion' of client-side technologies had not become so prevalent.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LAMP_(software_bundle)