archetype vs duplicate

archetype

noun
  • A protograph (“original manuscript of a text from which all further copies derive”). 

  • A character, object, or story that is based on a known character, object, or story. 

  • An original model of which all other similar concepts, objects, or persons are merely copied, derivative, emulated, or patterned; a prototype. 

  • An ideal example of something; a quintessence. 

  • According to Swiss psychologist Carl Jung: a universal pattern of thought, present in an individual's unconscious, inherited from the past collective experience of humanity. 

verb
  • To depict as, model using, or otherwise associate an object or subject with an archetype. 

duplicate

noun
  • An original instrument repeated; a document which is the same as another in all essential particulars, and differing from a mere copy in having all the validity of an original 

  • One that resembles or corresponds to another; an identical copy. 

  • A pawnbroker's ticket, which must be shown when redeeming a pledged item. 

  • The game of duplicate bridge. 

  • The game of duplicate Scrabble. 

  • A biological specimen that was gathered alongside another specimen and represents the same species. 

verb
  • To produce something equal to. 

  • To make a copy of. 

  • To do repeatedly; to do again. 

adj
  • In which the hands of cards, tiles, etc. are preserved between rounds to be played again by other players. 

  • Being the same as another; identical, often having been copied from an original. 

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