-like vs -y

-like

suffix
  • Resembling, having some of the characteristics of (used to form adjectives from nouns). 

  • Used to form adverbs from adjectives or nouns; alternative of -ly. 

-y

suffix
  • Added to nouns and adjectives to form adjectives meaning “having the quality of”, either “involving the referent” or “analogous to it”. 

  • Added to verbs to form adjectives meaning "inclined to". 

  • Used in the name of some locations which end in -ia in Latin. 

  • Forming abstract nouns denoting a state, condition, or quality. 

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