discipline vs domain

discipline

noun
  • A category in which a certain art, sport or other activity belongs. 

  • A flagellation as a means of obtaining sexual gratification. 

  • A specific branch of knowledge or learning. 

  • An enforced compliance or control. 

  • A whip used for self-flagellation. 

  • A controlled behaviour; self-control. 

  • A set of rules regulating behaviour. 

  • A punishment to train or maintain control. 

  • A state of order based on submission to authority. 

  • A systematic method of obtaining obedience. 

verb
  • To impose order on someone. 

  • To train someone by instruction and practice. 

  • To punish someone in order to (re)gain control. 

  • To teach someone to obey authority. 

domain

noun
  • A field or sphere of activity, influence or expertise. 

  • A ring with no zero divisors; that is, in which no product of nonzero elements is zero. 

  • The highest rank in the classification of organisms, above kingdom; in the three-domain system, one of the taxa Bacteria, Archaea, or Eukaryota. 

  • A geographic area owned or controlled by a single person or organization. 

  • A collection of DNS or DNS-like domain names consisting of a delegated domain name and all its subdomains. 

  • The set of input (argument) values for which a function is defined. 

  • The collection of computers identified by a domain's domain names. 

  • A collection of information having to do with a domain, the computers named in the domain, and the network on which the computers named in the domain reside. 

  • A folded section of a protein molecule that has a discrete function; the equivalent section of a chromosome 

  • A small region of a magnetic material with a consistent magnetization direction. 

  • A group of related items, topics, or subjects. 

  • An open and connected set in some topology. For example, the interval (0,1) as a subset of the real numbers. 

  • Such a region used as a data storage element in a bubble memory. 

  • A form of technical metadata that represent the type of a data item, its characteristics, name, and usage. 

  • The set of all possible mathematical entities (points) where a given function is defined. 

  • Any DNS domain name, particularly one which has been delegated and has become representative of the delegated domain name and its subdomains. 

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