site vs topology

site

noun
  • A part of the body which has been operated on. 

  • The posture or position of a thing. 

  • A computer installation, particularly one associated with an intranet or internet service or telecommunications. 

  • A place fitted or chosen for any certain permanent use or occupation 

  • The place where anything is fixed; situation; local position 

  • A category together with a choice of Grothendieck topology. 

  • Region of a protein, a piece of DNA or RNA where chemical reactions take place. 

  • A website. 

verb
  • To situate or place a building or construction project. 

topology

noun
  • The anatomical structure of part of the body. 

  • The properties of a particular technological embodiment that are not affected by differences in the physical layout or form of its application. 

  • The topographical study of geographic locations or given places in relation to their history. 

  • The arrangement of nodes in a communications network. 

  • The branch of mathematics dealing with those properties of a geometrical object (of arbitrary dimensionality) that are unchanged by continuous deformations (such as stretching, bending, etc., without tearing or gluing). 

  • Any collection τ of subsets of a given set X that contains both the empty set and X, and which is closed under finitary intersections and arbitrary unions. 

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