The target space into which a function maps elements of its domain. It always contains the range of the function, but can be larger than the range if the function is not surjective.(noun)
Wiktionary.org : Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
Use "codomain" in a sentence
"For example, if a unary function is considered as a set of ordered pairs, then the domain and codomain are given by the first and second projections, respectively."
"Combinatory terms are thought of as functions, and functions are thought to have a domain (a set of possible inputs) and a codomain (a set of possible outputs)."
"Category theory, where functions are components of categories (without a set theoretic reduction assumed), retains the notions of a domain and a codomain; moreover, every function has a unique domain and codomain."