Domestic
Encyclopedia
Domestic or domestique can refer to:
  • A cycling domestique
    Cycling domestique
    A domestique is a road bicycle racer who works for the benefit of his team and leader. The French domestique translates as "servant". In Italy and Spain, the term gregario is used, while in Belgium and the Netherlands the term knecht or helper are used...

  • A domestic worker
    Domestic worker
    A domestic worker is a man, woman or child who works within the employer's household. Domestic workers perform a variety of household services for an individual or a family, from providing care for children and elderly dependents to cleaning and household maintenance, known as housekeeping...

  • Domestic airport
    Domestic airport
    A domestic airport is an airport which handles only domestic flights or flights within the same country. Domestic airports don't have customs and immigration facilities and are therefore incapable of handling flights to or from a foreign airport....

  • Domestic violence
    Domestic violence
    Domestic violence, also known as domestic abuse, spousal abuse, battering, family violence, and intimate partner violence , is broadly defined as a pattern of abusive behaviors by one or both partners in an intimate relationship such as marriage, dating, family, or cohabitation...

  • Domestic (band), a group with Trust in Trance Records
    Trust in Trance Records
    Trust in Trance Records is the second record label started by Avi Nissim, Yaniv Haviv and Guy Sabbag in late 1993.The label was formed under the name Outmosphere Records late in 1993.It was founded by Avi...

  • Domestikos
    Domestikos
    Domestikos , in English sometimes [the] Domestic, was a civil, ecclesiastic and military office in the late Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire.-Military usage:...

    (the Domestic), a Byzantine title
    • Domestic of the Schools
      Domestic of the Schools
      The Domestic of the Schools was a senior Byzantine military office, extant from the 8th century until at least the early 14th century. Originally simply the commander of the Scholai, the senior of the elite tagmata regiments, the Domestic quickly rose in prominence: by the mid-9th century, its...

      , commander-in-chief of the Byzantine army in the 9th-11th centuries
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