backslash vs hurt

backslash

noun
  • The punctuation mark \. 

  • Used erroneously in reference to, or in reading out, the ordinary slash, that is, the punctuation mark /. 

  • |passage= […] I was trying to find a web-site for which I had been given the following address: http://www.isop.ucla.edu/pacrim/pubs/korjournal.htm. […] I began to work backwards, removing first the last part of the address following the last backslash (/korjournal.htm).}} 

verb
  • To escape (a metacharacter) by prepending a backslash that serves as an escape character, thereby forming an escape sequence. 

hurt

noun
  • A husk. 

  • A roundel azure (blue circular spot). 

  • A band on a trip hammer's helve, bearing the trunnions. 

  • An emotional or psychological humiliation or bad experience. 

verb
  • To cause (a person or animal) physical pain and/or injury. 

  • To be painful. 

  • To cause (somebody) emotional pain. 

  • To damage, harm, impair, undermine, impede. 

adj
  • Wounded, physically injured. 

  • Pained. 

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