A model is a simplification. It is an interpretation of reality that abstracts the aspects relevant to solving the problem at hand and ignores extraneous detail.
A model is a selectively simplified and consciously structured form of knowledge. An appropriate model makes sense of information and focuses it on a problem.
The model is distilled knowledge. The model is the team's agreed upon way of structuring domain knowledge and distinguishing the elements of most interest. A model captures how we choose to think about the domain as we select terms, break down concepts, and relate them.
One reason why you are having trouble finding good examples of models: models are things that live in people's heads.
You might try reviewing the domain code in dddsample-core, which started as a joint project by Eric Evans and Citerus, using the cargo shipping domain from the examples in the 2003 DDD book.
The code, of course, is the design - it's the expression of their "model" of cargo shipping expressed in software. So you can look in that code, and see the language of the processes of cargo shipping built into that code.
In other words, the code there is a reflection of the "domain model" - the conceptualization of the business of cargo shipping shared by that team.