locale vs manor

locale

noun
  • The place where something happens. 

  • The set of settings related to the language and region in which a computer program executes. Examples are language, currency and time formats, character encoding etc. 

  • A partially ordered set with the following additional axiomatic properties: any finite subset of it has a meet, any arbitrary subset of it has a join, and distributivity, which states that a binary meet distributes with respect to an arbitrary join. (Note: locales are just like frames except that the category of locales is opposite to the category of frames.) 

manor

noun
  • One's neighbourhood. 

  • A landed estate. 

  • The lord's residence and seat of control in such a district. 

  • Any home area or territory in which authority is exercised, often in a police or criminal context. 

  • The main house of such an estate or a similar residence; a mansion. 

  • A district over which a feudal lord could exercise certain rights and privileges in medieval western Europe. 

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