backset vs rollback

backset

noun
  • A check; a relapse; a discouragement; a setback. 

  • Whatever is thrown back in its course, such as water. 

verb
  • To plow again in the fall; said of prairie land broken up in the spring. 

rollback

noun
  • A return to a prior state by undoing some operation, especially of policy or price changes. 

  • A withdrawal of military forces. 

  • The situation where a rollercoaster fails to reach the top of a hill and instead rolls backward. 

  • An operation which returns a database, or group of records in a database, to a previous state (normally to the previous commit point). 

  • A form of flatbed truck adapted or designed specifically as a tow truck or for transporting other vehicles. 

  • An uncommanded reduction in the thrust of a jet engine. 

  • The strategy of forcing a change in the major policies of a state, usually by replacing its ruling regime, or by totally annihilating an enemy's armed forces and occupying the country, as was done in World War II to Italy, Germany, and Japan. 

verb
  • To return to the previous state. 

  • To reduce thrust without having been commanded to do so. 

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