article vs object

article

noun
  • An object, a member of a group or class. 

  • A section of a legal document, bylaws, etc. or, in the plural, the entire document seen as a collection of these. 

  • A piece of nonfictional writing such as a story, report, opinion piece, or entry in a newspaper, magazine, journal, dictionary, encyclopedia, etc. 

  • A genuine article. 

  • A part or segment of something joined to other parts, or, in combination, forming a structured set. 

  • A part of speech that indicates, specifies and limits a noun (a, an, or the in English). In some languages the article may appear as an ending (e.g. definite article in Swedish) or there may be none (e.g. Russian, Pashto). 

verb
  • To bind by articles of apprenticeship. 

  • To formulate in articles; to set forth in distinct particulars. 

object

noun
  • An instantiation of a class or structure. 

  • A person or thing toward which an emotion is directed. 

  • An instance of one of the two kinds of entities that form a category, the other kind being the arrows (also called morphisms). 

  • Objective; goal, end or purpose of something. 

  • A thing that has physical existence but is not alive. 

  • The noun phrase which is an internal complement of a verb phrase or a prepositional phrase. In a verb phrase with a transitive action verb, it is typically the receiver of the action. 

verb
  • To disagree with or oppose something or someone; (especially in a Court of Law) to raise an objection. 

How often have the words article and object occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )