Meaning Domain
What does Domain mean? Here you find 141 meanings of the word Domain. You can also add a definition of Domain yourself

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Domain


The set of values an independent variable can take. For example, the independent variable of the time domain is time; and for the frequency domain, it is frequency.
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

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A taxonomic category above the kingdom level; the three domains are Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya.
Source: phschool.com

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In COBIT, the grouping of control objectives into four logical stages in the life cycle of investments involving IT (Plan and Organise, Acquire and Implement, Deliver and Support, and Monitor and Eval [..]
Source: isaca.org

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In air pollution modeling, the geographical area over which a simulation is performed.
Source: w1.weather.gov

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A sphere of knowledge, or a collection of facts about some program entities or a number of network points or addresses, identified by a name. On the Internet, a domain consists of a set of network add [..]
Source: sans.org

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1an area of knowledge or activity; especially one that someone is responsible for The care of older people is being placed firmly within the domain of the family. Physics used to be very much a male d [..]
Source: oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com

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early 15c., in Scottish, from Middle French domaine "domain, estate," from Old French demaine "lord's estate," from Latin dominium "property, dominion," from dominus [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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A domain is the main subdivision of Internet addresses, the last three letters after the final dot, and it tells you what kind of organization you are dealing with. There are six top-level domains widely used: .com (commercial) .edu (educational),.net (network operations), .gov (US government), .mil (US military) and .org (organization). Other, two [..]
Source: ama.org (offline)

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Represents an IP (Internet Protocol) address or set of IP addresses that comprise a domain. The domain name appears in URLs to identify web pages or in email addresses. For example, the email address for the First Lady is first.lady@whitehouse.gov, whitehouse.gov, being the domain name. Each domain name ends with a suffix that indicates what top le [..]
Source: tutorialspoint.com (offline)

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Part of an Internet address. The network hierarchy consists of domains and subdomains. At the top are a number of major categories (e.g., com, edu, gov); next are domains within these categories (e.g. [..]
Source: dataprise.com

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A domain is a named Internet address that resolves to the numbered Internet Protocol (IP) addresses computers use to connect. Examples: sendgrid.com, yourdomain.com, google.com. Simply put, it’s the web address your users type into their browser to learn about your company. If you are on a Pro 100k or above plan you will have your very own dedicate [..]
Source: sendgrid.com (offline)

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An area of knowledge or activity characterized by a family of related systems. [D04828]
Source: maxwideman.com

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This is a higher level section of the Internet, usually given its own DNS. The domain is the section of an address before the directory slashes start. "htmlgoodies.com" is my domain. Click here if you want one of your own!
Source: htmlgoodies.com (offline)

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1. In the Internet, a portion of the spanning hierarchy tree that refers to general groupings of networks based on organization type or geography. 2. In SNA, an SSCP and the resources it controls. 3. In IS-IS, a logical set of networks.
Source: wildpackets.com (offline)

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Networking system developed by Apollo Computer (now part of Hewlett-Packard) for use in its engineering workstations.
Source: wildpackets.com (offline)

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sphere: a particular environment or walk of life; "his social sphere is limited"; "it was a closed area of employment"; "he&#39 [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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An Identity API v3 entity. Represents a collection of projects, groups and users that defines administrative boundaries for managing OpenStack Identity entities. On the Internet, separates a website f [..]
Source: docs.openstack.org

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region. Lands under the rule of a govern.
Source: eenglish.in

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n. A sphere or field of action or interest.
Source: easypacelearning.com

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1. The independent variable used to express a function. Note: Examples of domains are time, frequency, and space. 2. In distributed networks, all the hardware and software under the control of a specified set of one or more host processors. [From Weik '89] 3. [A] unique context (e.g., access control parameters) in which a program is operating; [..]
Source: atis.org (offline)

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A domain is the main subdivision of Internet addresses‚ the last three letters after the final dot‚ and it tells you what kind of organization you are dealing with. There are six top–level domains wid [..]
Source: lazworld.com

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A domain is the URL name at which a website is accessible through and what potential users will type into their search bar to access it. For example, our domain is www.3mil.co.uk. The best domains are made more searchable by having a shorter and more relevant URL.
Source: 3mil.co.uk (offline)

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A suffix at the end of the URL which indicates the type of organization providing the information in a Web site. Examples of domains are .gov and .org. (Unit 7> Tips for Using the Internet)
Source: usg.edu

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Internetworking Dictionary "Domain" is a heavily overused term in the Internet. It can be used in the Administrative Domain context, or the Domain Name context. See also: Administrative Domain, Domain Name System.
Source: comptechdoc.org (offline)

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A domain is a person or organisation’s unique space on the internet. In layman’s terms, it is commonly used to mean the name of your website.
Source: thinkingit.com.au (offline)

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The name for a network of computers. For example, znet.com is the domain name for any number of machines, or hosts, within zNET's network. Any machine attached to that network, including all user [..]
Source: writedesignonline.com

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In protein chemistry, a protein segment,100 amino acids or less, that can fold into a specific three-dimensional structure independent of other domains on the same protein; in general biology, an orga [..]
Source: nature.com

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A domain is the part of a computer network in which one entity controls the data processing resources, for example a website. Learn more
Source: developer.mozilla.org

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The set of all first coordinates in a function.
Source: mathway.com

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A domain is a set of computers on a network that are managed as a unit.
Source: ourcommunity.com.au (offline)

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Independently stable tertiary structures of proteins. They are distinct functional and/or structural units and can evolve, exist and function independently.
Source: ebi.ac.uk

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A discrete portion of a protein with its own function. The combination of domains in a single protein determines its overall function.
Source: free.premierbiosoft.com

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(1) A group of computers and devices on a network that are administered as a unit with common rules and procedures. Within the Internet, domains are defined by the IP address. All devices sharing a co [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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1. Class of entities constituting a subject matter of science. 2. Field of mastery. 3. Biological taxonomy. Highest level of system classification. Three are recognised- Sarchae, Bacteria, Eukarya. 4. [..]
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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All the hardware and software resources controlled by a single computer system. In a local area network (LAN), all the clients, servers, and devices under the control of a single security database, ad [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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The name for a company, organization, or individual's Internet connection. Individual computers within this domain all end with the domain as a part of their host name.
Source: really-fine.com

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The unique name that identifies an internet site. Domain names always have two or more parts separated by dots.
Source: consp.com

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a unique home of a website or server; e.g., in the email address "contact@bahai-library.com" the second part, "bahai-library.com," is the domain. If you were to register a domain, [..]
Source: bahai-library.com

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This is a subcomponent of a URL which identifies the site of host of a page. For example, our domain is linuceum.com (-note, it is always of the form: <something>.<something else>)
Source: linuceum.com

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A domain name, also referred to as URL, is the address at which your site will be found on the internet. Typically, www.mysite.com.
Source: dropbears.com

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A collection of machines controlled by an organisation, or a site to which email can be addressed.
Source: www-h.eng.cam.ac.uk (offline)

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Look under General
Source: chabotcollege.edu (offline)

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Typically the last three letters of an Internet address represent the domain or particular section of the Internet.  If you notice, both Email and Web addresses end with these suffixes.  Domain suffixes include:
Source: chabotcollege.edu (offline)

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A groupof computers and devices on a network that are treated as a single unit with common rules and procedures. Within the Internet, domains are defined by the Ipaddress. All devices sharing [..]
Source: ambrow.com

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The set of all x-coordinates in a relation.
Source: blc.edu (offline)

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Broadest level of scientific classification; above Kingdom
Source: myfwc.com

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Scheme used for logical or location organization of the web. Many people also use the word domain to refer to a specific website.
Source: seobook.com

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A segment of a folded protein structure showing conformational integrity. A domain could include the entire protein or just a fraction of the protein. Some proteins, such as antibodies, contain many s [..]
Source: xray.bmc.uu.se

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(French : domaine) Discrete portion of a protein with its own function. The combination of domains in a single protein determines its overall function.
Source: atlasgeneticsoncology.org

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larger, more inclusive taxonomic category than kingdom
Source: ontrack-media.net

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A sub-set of internet addresses. Domains are hierarchical, and lower-level domains often refer to particular web sites within a top-level domain. The most significant part of the address comes at the [..]
Source: cadenza.org

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The root address for a web page.
Source: shopify.com

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Sets of values. For example, a domain defines the values that are allowed for a feature attribute. Enterprise industry models store domains in domain tables, which are created using the Data Model Adm [..]
Source: knowledge.autodesk.com

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In the Metadata feature, the domain refers to element values that are defined as valid within the FGDC CSDGM Standard . A domain can be a list of pre-defined values in a menu, a range of numbers, free [..]
Source: knowledge.autodesk.com

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In CERF, “Domains” are a way to subdivide your user population so that not all users necessarily need to see every template and every resource type or controlled vocabulary in the  system. For example [..]
Source: cerf-notebook.com

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The set of possible values for the input or independent variable.
Source: connectedmath.msu.edu

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the set of all possible values of the argument of a function. domain of the function f :
Source: depts.gpc.edu (offline)

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A domain is a set of coordinates in which a mathematical function resides. A waveform, for instance, has dimensions of amplitude and time, and it is said to exist in the time domain, while a spectrum [..]
Source: dataphysics.com

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A microscopic magnetic region composed of a group of atoms whose magnetic fields are aligned in a common direction.
Source: boomeria.org

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The symbolic name of a server or other entity accessible through the Internet. Examples of domains are www.nwsla.noaa.gov, www.iswest.com, lvl4.com, and www.oakparkfoundation.org.
Source: rossde.com

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Also called a URL. This is the address of a website, more specifically the address of the website’s homepage.
Source: blog.getresponse.com

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Part of an Internet address
Source: coin.org.uk

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Domain is a territory over which absolute control or rule is vested and exercised by a sovereign country. It also refers to an estate in land or paramount title and absolute ownership of land.
Source: definitions.uslegal.com

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An internet domain name is a name for one or more computers grouped together on a network, such as sun.com for example. The domain name service (DNS) lets computers convert internet domain names into [..]
Source: valinor.sorcery.net

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Generally this refers to the name of the computer (or more specifically, the server) connected to the Internet. However, there are cases where a domain may map to more than one IP address. As no two d [..]
Source: dwarfnet.com

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In SQL (Standard Query Language), domain has a most unlikely meaning — alias. The names of all the various types of data are so nonstandard, it is difficult to write portable SQL. So you make up your [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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domain - a specific name for a network of computers.
Source: speedguide.net

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A part of the address hierarchy a machine is placed in; ie berk.com.au is 'berk' in the com.au (company in Australia) domain.
Source: acmi.net.au (offline)

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Strictly speaking, in the Internet’s domain name system (DNS), a domain is a name with which name server records are associated that describe subdomains or host. For example, the website you’re visiti [..]
Source: theweboasis.com

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A set of host names consisting of a single domain name and all the domain names below it
Source: apnic.net

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General term referring to an area of the World Wide Web that contains a unique website (or websites).
Source: techboomers.com

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The domain is the root of a host name for example, .com, .gov, .org, etc.
Source: webarchive.jira.com (offline)

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A domain, or domain name, is what identifies a group of computers on the Internet. An example would be dyndns.org, which is the domain for many computers that use our service, where the name of a part [..]
Source: help.dyn.com

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An organizational address that has been registered. Example: www.altavista.com, or www.ircbeginner.com. Domain names are used to make finding a site easier. Without domain names, one would have to kee [..]
Source: ircbeginner.com

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The unique name that identifies an Internet site. You'll find it to the right of the @ sign in an email address. The domain name of daemous@mail.abc.com is abc.com. Domain names are issued by the [..]
Source: everyone.net

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(.edu, .com, .mil, .net, .uk, et al) Just as a Windows file extensions (such as .txt for text files) give some indication of what kind of file it is, the last part of an Internet site's domain name tells what kind of site it is. The most rapidly expanding of these is &quot;.com;other common ones include .edu, for educational institutions, [..]
Source: dl.ket.org (offline)

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    A computer domain is a group of networked computers that share a common communications address.
Source: cgu.edu

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A group of computers whose hostnames share a common suffix. This is the domain name. ChicagoNetTech's domain name is chicagonettech.com. See also: Domain Name System
Source: portal.chicagonettech.com (offline)

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(n) a particular environment or walk of life(n) territory over which rule or control is exercised(n) (mathematics) the set of values of the independent variable for which a function is defined(n) peop [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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An internet address owned by a company, organisation or individual, such as jonstorm.com, nasa.gov or bbc.co.uk. See also TLD.
Source: netmeg.net (offline)

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An internet address owned by a company, organisation or individual, such as jonstorm.com, nasa.gov or bbc.co.uk. See also TLD, How web addresses work.
Source: jonstorm.com

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System context: A class of systems that have similar requirements and capabilities. Application context: The body of knowledge defining the range and scope of an application in terms of elements, rule [..]
Source: opengeospatial.org

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The part of the Internet address that specifies your computer’s location in the world. The address is written as a series of names separated by full stops. The most common top level domains are .edu education (US), .net network resource, .com commercial, .gov public bodies
Source: mantex.co.uk (offline)

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Region of a protein with a distinct tertiary structure (e.g., globular or rodlike) and characteristic activity; homologous domains may occur in different proteins.
Source: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

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A substructure in a ferromagnetic material within which all the elementary magnets (electron spins) are held aligned in one direction by interatomic forces; if isolated, a domain would be magnetically [..]
Source: nde-ed.org

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(1) Relative to networking, the portion of an Internet address that denotes the name of a computer network. For instance, in the IP address jones@bizco.sales.com, the domain is bizco.sales.com. (2) Re [..]
Source: kc.mcafee.com

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A group of devices on a network that are administered as a unit with common rules and procedures. Domain Name Server
Source: e-ratecentral.com

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Amazon Elasticsearch Service (Amazon ES): The hardware, software, and data exposed by Amazon Elasticsearch Service (Amazon ES) endpoints. An Amazon ES domain is a service wrapper around [..]
Source: docs.aws.amazon.com

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A domain is a collection of related securable items such as actions, reports, report data, report data sources, or custom report fields. Each domain is secured by a domain security policy.
Source: workday-irsc.weebly.com

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A group of atoms whose magnetic polarities agree and produce an overall magnetic field. A domain consists of 1014 to 1015 atoms; there are approximately 10 million domains per cubic centimeter.
Source: powerengineering.org (offline)

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The name that a site owner gives to a website, which appears in the website’s URL and email addresses. Generally, domains use the example.com format, where example is the domain name and com is the top-level domain.
Source: documentation.cpanel.net (offline)

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a field of thought or activity. Educational domains traditionally covered the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor. Subject disciplines such as history or science can be termed domains ( see also for [..]
Source: dictionaryofeducation.co.uk

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The universe or entire set of behaviors or content knowledge that a test is intended to measure and that its scores should be interpreted to represent. Most tests contain only a sample of the domain they are intended to be measuring. (See also content domain.)
Source: ncme.org (offline)

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The first major grouping of organisms in biological/taxonomical data, for example the Domain Eukaryote, meaning organisms with complex cell structures
Source: noticenature.ie (offline)

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(Solomon) a harmonic function
Source: solomonsmusic.net (offline)

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The region of an enzyme that interacts with its substrate to cause the enzymatic reaction.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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DNA-binding domains present in Proteins of the HMG-box superfamily including the archetypal HMGB Proteins, a number of sequence specific Transcription Factors, and other DNA-Binding Proteins. The doma [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Triple-looped Protein Domains linked by disulfide bonds. These common structural domains, so-named for their resemblance to Danish pastries known as kringlers, play a Role in binding Membranes, Protei [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Protein Domains that are enriched in Proline. The cyclical Nature of Proline causes the peptide bonds it Forms to have a limited degree of conformational mobility. Therefore the presence of multiple P [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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The level of protein structure in which combinations of Secondary Protein Structures (alpha helices, beta sheets, loop regions, and motifs) pack together to form folded shapes called domains. Disulfid [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Recognition modules in Proteins that mediate interactions between specific Proteins involved in Signal Transduction PATHWAYS. They fold to form recognition pockets complementary to the short interacti [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Protein Interaction Domains of about 70-90 amino acid residues, named after a common structure found in PSD-95, Discs Large, and Zona Occludens 1 Proteins. PDZ domains are involved in the recruitment [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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A domain, in the context of networking, refers to any group of users, workstations, devices, printers, computers and database servers that share different types of data via network resources. There ar [..]
Source: techopedia.com

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A specific physical region or amino acid sequence in a protein which is associated with a particular function or corresponding segment of DNA.
Source: dana-farber.org (offline)

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a region of a gene or gene product. A neutralizing domain is a specific site on the virus to which a neutralizing antibody is directed.
Source: iavi.org

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The top level of biological classification or taxonomy, which goes as follows: Domain -> Kingdom -> Phylum -> Class -> Order -> Family -> Genus -> Species. The three domains of life are Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
Source: ictar.aq (offline)

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A group of computers that share a central directory database that contains information about about users, their privileges, resources, and the privileges required to access those resources. A user who needs to use a computer within a domain has a single account that is unique across the domain. Implementing a domain provides several benefits, inclu [..]
Source: archive.oreilly.com (offline)

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The domain of a variable is a set of all possible values that can be assigned to the variable. When the domain contains numbers only, the variables are called numerical variables. The domain of a numerical variable may be further restricted to integers, rational numbers or real numbers. When the domain contains boolean values only, the variables ar [..]
Source: glossary.computing.society.informs.org (offline)

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An environment or context that includes a set of system resources and a set of system entities that have the right to access the resources as defined by a common security policy, security model, or security architecture. See Security Domain.
Source: ise.gov (offline)

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An area of knowledge or activity characterized by a set of concepts and terminology understood by practitioners in that area.
Source: ise.gov (offline)

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A network that contains a group of computers and devices that are adminstered as one unit with a set of rules and procedures.
Source: landofcode.com

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An alternate name for a base data type that is defined using the RDM SQL create domain statement.
Source: raima.com

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A domain is a unique section of a single instance used to separate data, processes, and UI elements while still sharing global properties and global processes across the entire instance.
Source: wiki.servicenow.com

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A domain is a user-friendly name that represents an IP Address or similar online location. This is similar to referring to “Joe’s House” instead of saying, “123 Park Ave.” For example, networkadvertising.org is a domain representing a website located on the IP Address 198.101.192.213 (as of the date of this writing).
Source: networkadvertising.org (offline)

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A discrete portion of a protein with its own function. The combination of domains in a single protein determines its overall function.
Source: groups.molbiosci.northwestern.edu

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In air pollution modeling, the geographical area over which a simulation is performed.
Source: forecast.weather.gov (offline)

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The fiefdom claimed by a vampire, usually a prince.
Source: thecamarilla.tripod.com

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A sphere of activity, influence or knowledge related to a specific physical or conceptual property.
Source: rcaf-arc.forces.gc.ca (offline)

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A relatively small protein segment or module (100 amino acids or less) that can fold into a specific three-dimensional structure independently of other domains.
Source: sites.sinauer.com (offline)

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A spatial grouping of neotectonic features considered to exhibit similar recurrence and behavioural characteristics. [Neotectonics database field]
Source: ga.gov.au

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All or part of an Internet name, address or element that identifies a computer and the organization that transmits or receives electronic data.
Source: oclc.org (offline)

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Domain


On the Internet, domains are attached to an Internet Protocol (IP) address. All devices sharing a common part of the IP address are said to be in the same domain. A domain name is usaid.gov (USAID Aut [..]
Source: developmentwork.net

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A domain is a group of computers that share a common domain database and security policy.
Source: glossary.westnetinc.com (offline)

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A naming procedure by which web users identify a particular website address or location. www.ChannelAdvisor.com is a domain address.
Source: ssc.channeladvisor.com (offline)

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 An area of learning within a sub-field of the National Qualifications Framework, as defined in the National Qualifications Framework classification system. 
Source: attto.org.nz (offline)

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A designation for particular location on the Internet. A domain, for example &quot;www.SitesOutlet.com,&quot; contains files that make up the content of Web pages under that address. Domain names are associated with IP addresses.
Source: sitesoutlet.com (offline)

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The root address for a web page.
Source: choopong.com

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in the definition of the elements in the metadata standard, the domain identifies valid values for a data element.
Source: fgdc.gov

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In air pollution modeling, the geographical area over which a simulation is performed.
Source: weatherdudes.com

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In modelling, the segment of the subsurface being considered. It is defined by its boundaries and interior geometry (based on its hydrostratigraphy), and its material properties (porosity, hydraulic conductivity, etc.).
Source: contaminatedsite.com (offline)

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A problem area. Typically, many application programs exist to solve the problems in a single domain. The following prerequisites indicate the presence of a domain: the existence of comprehensive relat [..]
Source: informatique.umons.ac.be

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(computing,Internet) domain (DNS domain name)
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Domain may refer to: Domain (taxonomy), a taxonomic subdivision larger than a kingdom Domain name, the name of a realm of administrative autonomy, authority, or control on the Internet Magnetic domain [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Domain may refer to: Domain (taxonomy), a taxonomic subdivision larger than a kingdom Domain name, the name of a realm of administrative autonomy, authority, or control on the Internet Magnetic domain [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In biological taxonomy, a domain (Latin: regio), also superkingdom or empire, is the highest taxonomic rank of organisms in the three-domain system of taxonomy designed by Carl Woese, an American micr [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In mathematics, and more specifically in algebra, a domain is a nonzero ring in which ab = 0 implies a = 0 or b = 0. (Sometimes such a ring is said to "have the zero-product property".) Equi [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In mathematical analysis, a domain is any connected open subset of a finite-dimensional vector space. This is a different concept than the domain of a function, though it is often used for that purpos [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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A domain is a field of study that defines a set of common requirements, terminology, and functionality for any software program constructed to solve a problem in the area of computer programming, know [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Domain is a 2009 French film directed by Patric Chiha, starring Béatrice Dalle, Isaïe Sultan, and Alain Libolt. The film has been cited as a favorite by filmmaker John Waters, who presented it as his [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Domain (Chinese: 大本型) is a mega shopping mall in Yau Tong, Kwun Tong District, Kowloon, Hong Kong, serving about 80,000 people in Yau Tong Estate, Yau Lai Estate, Yau Chui Court, Yau Mei Court and Lei [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In biomedicine, a discrete portion of a protein that has its own function. The combination of domains in a single protein determines the overall function of the protein.
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)





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