aspect vs core

aspect

noun
  • Any specific feature, part, or element of something. 

  • Position or situation with regard to seeing; that position which enables one to look in a particular direction; position in relation to the points of the compass. 

  • One's appearance or expression. 

  • A grammatical quality of a verb which determines the relationship of the speaker to the internal temporal flow of the event which the verb describes, or whether the speaker views the event from outside as a whole, or from within as it is unfolding. 

  • In aspect-oriented programming, a feature or component that can be applied to parts of a program independent of any inheritance hierarchy. 

  • The way something appears when viewed from a certain direction or perspective. 

  • The way something appears when considered from a certain point of view. 

  • The relative position of heavenly bodies as they appear to an observer on earth; the angular relationship between points in a horoscope. 

  • The personified manifestation of a deity that represents one or more of its characteristics or functions. 

  • The visual indication of a colour light (or mechanical) signal as displayed to the driver. With colour light signals this would be red, yellow or green. 

  • Prospect; outlook. 

  • A phase or a partial, but significant view or description of something. 

verb
  • To have a particular aspect or type of aspect. 

  • To channel a divine being. 

core

noun
  • The most important part of a thing or aggregate of things wherever located and whether of any determinate location at all; the essence. 

  • A piece of ferromagnetic material (e.g., soft iron), inside the windings of an electromagnet, that channels the magnetic field. 

  • The bony process which forms the central axis of the horns in many animals. 

  • The set of feasible allocations that cannot be improved upon by a subset (a coalition) of the economy's agents. 

  • A tiny sample of organic material obtained by means of a fine-needle biopsy. 

  • An atomic nucleus plus inner electrons (i.e., an atom, except for its valence electrons). 

  • A deposit paid by the purchaser of a rebuilt part, to be refunded on return of a used, rebuildable part, or the returned rebuildable part itself. 

  • A disorder of sheep caused by worms in the liver. 

  • The portion of a mold that creates an internal cavity within a casting or that makes a hole in or through a casting. 

  • Used to designate the main and most diverse monophyletic group within a clade or taxonomic group. 

  • The anatomical core, muscles which bridge abdomen and thorax. 

  • An individual computer processor, in the sense when several processors (called cores or CPU cores) are plugged together in one single integrated circuit to work as one (called a multi-core processor). 

  • The central part of a protein's structure, consisting mostly of hydrophobic amino acids. 

  • A cylindrical sample of rock or other materials obtained by core drilling. 

  • The heart or inner part of a physical thing. 

  • The central fissile portion of a fission weapon. 

  • A hollow cylindrical piece of cardboard around which a web of paper or plastic is wound. 

  • The center or inner part of a space or area. 

  • The central part of a fruit, containing the kernels or seeds. 

  • The inner part of a nuclear reactor, in which the nuclear reaction takes place. 

  • A miner's underground working time or shift. 

  • The material between surface materials in a structured composite sandwich material. 

adj
  • Forming the most important or essential part. 

verb
  • To cut or drill through the core of (something). 

  • To remove the core of an apple or other fruit. 

  • To extract a sample with a drill. 

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