basis vs exemplar

basis

noun
  • An underlying condition or circumstance. 

  • A starting point, base or foundation for an argument or hypothesis. 

  • A regular frequency. 

  • A physical base or foundation. 

  • In a vector space, a linearly independent set of vectors spanning the whole vector space. 

  • Amount paid for an investment, including commissions and other expenses. 

  • A collection of subsets ("basis elements") of a set, such that this collection covers the set, and for any two basis elements which both contain an element of the set, there is a third basis element contained in the intersection of the first two, which also contains that element. 

  • The difference between the cash price a dealer pays to a farmer for his produce and an agreed reference price, which is usually the futures price at which the given crop is trading at a commodity exchange. 

exemplar

noun
  • A role model. 

  • A handwritten manuscript used by a scribe to make a handwritten copy; the original copy of what gets multiply reproduced in a copy machine. 

  • A well known usage of a scientific theory. 

  • Something fit to be imitated; an ideal, a model. 

  • A pattern after which others should be made; an archetype. 

  • A copy of a book or piece of writing. 

  • Something typical or representative of a class; an example that typifies. 

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