Swan vs rhubarb

Swan

noun
  • someone connected with Swansea City Football Club, as a fan, player, coach, etc. 

  • someone connected with the Sydney Swans, as a fan, player, coach, etc. 

name
  • A surname transferred from the nickname. 

rhubarb

noun
  • Any plant of the genus Rheum, especially Rheum rhabarbarum, having large leaves and long green or reddish acidic leafstalks that are edible, in particular when cooked (although the leaves are mildly poisonous). 

  • General background noise caused by several simultaneous indecipherable conversations, which is created in films, stage plays, etc., by actors repeating the word rhubarb; hence, such noise in other settings. 

  • A Royal Air Force World War II code name for operations by aircraft (fighters and fighter-bombers) involving low-level flight to seek opportunistic targets. 

  • An excited, angry exchange of words, especially at a sporting event. 

  • The leafstalks of common rhubarb or garden rhubarb (usually known as Rheum × hybridum), which are long, fleshy, often pale red, and with a tart taste, used as a food ingredient; they are frequently stewed with sugar and made into jam or used in crumbles, pies, etc. 

  • Nonsense; false utterance. 

  • A brawl. 

  • A ditch alongside a road or highway. 

  • The dried rhizome and roots of Rheum palmatum (Chinese rhubarb) or Rheum officinale (Tibetan rhubarb), from China, used as a laxative and purgative. 

adj
  • Of the colour of rhubarb: either brownish-yellow (the colour of rhubarb rhizomes and roots used for medicinal purposes), or pale red (often the colour of the leafstalks of common rhubarb). 

verb
  • Of fighter aircraft: to fire at a target opportunistically. 

  • To articulate indistinctly or mumble (words or phrases); to say inconsequential or vague things because one does not know what to say, or to stall for time. 

  • Of an actor in a film, stage play, etc.: to repeat the word rhubarb to create the sound of indistinct conversation; hence, to converse indistinctly, to mumble. 

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