bag vs trap

bag

verb
  • To catch or kill, especially when fishing or hunting. 

  • To arrest. 

  • To laugh uncontrollably. 

  • To take a woman away with one as a romantic or sexual interest. 

  • To steal. 

  • To put into a bag. 

  • To fit with a bag to collect urine. 

  • To hang like an empty bag. 

  • To drop away from the correct course. 

  • To gain possession of something, or to make first claim on something. 

  • To provide with artificial ventilation via a bag valve mask (BVM) resuscitator. 

  • To criticise sarcastically. 

  • To forget, ignore, or get rid of. 

  • To furnish or load with a bag. 

noun
  • A breathalyzer, so named because it formerly had a plastic bag over the end to measure a set amount of breath. 

  • One's preference. 

  • A container made of leather, plastic, or other material, usually with a handle or handles, in which you carry personal items, or clothes or other things that you need for travelling. Includes shopping bags, schoolbags, suitcases, and handbags. 

  • A soft container made out of cloth, paper, thin plastic, etc. and open at the top, used to hold food, commodities, and other goods. 

  • The scrotum. 

  • A collection of objects, disregarding order, but (unlike a set) in which elements may be repeated. 

  • £1000, a grand. 

  • A sac in animal bodies, containing some fluid or other substance. 

  • An ugly woman. 

  • A fellow gay man. 

  • The cloth-covered pillow used for first, second, and third base. 

  • A small envelope that contains drugs, especially narcotics. 

  • A dark circle under the eye, caused by lack of sleep, drug addiction etc. 

  • A large number or amount. 

  • First, second, or third base. 

  • A pouch tied behind a man's head to hold the back-hair of a wig; a bag wig. 

  • A unit of measure of cement equal to 94 pounds. 

  • The quantity of game bagged in a hunt. 

trap

verb
  • To physically capture, to catch in a trap or traps, or something like a trap. 

  • To ensnare; to take by stratagem; to entrap. 

  • To dress with ornaments; to adorn (especially said of horses). 

  • To capture (e.g. an error) in order to handle or process it. 

  • To successfully land an aircraft on an aircraft carrier using the carrier's arresting gear. 

  • To provide with a trap. 

  • To leave suddenly, to flee. 

  • To sell illegal drugs, especially in a public area. 

  • Of a 'trap': to trick a (heterosexual) man into having sex, by appearing to be a woman. 

  • to trap foxes 

  • To set traps for game; to make a business of trapping game. 

noun
  • A person's mouth. 

  • An exception generated by the processor or by an external event. 

  • A covering over a hole or opening; a trapdoor. 

  • A wooden instrument shaped somewhat like a shoe, used in the game of trapball. 

  • A genre of hip-hop music, with half-time drums and heavy sub-bass. 

  • The money earned by a prostitute for a pimp. 

  • A dark coloured igneous rock, now used to designate any non-granitic igneous rock; trap rock. 

  • A place in a water pipe, pump, etc., where air accumulates for lack of an outlet. 

  • The trapezius muscle. 

  • A bend, sag, or other device in a waste-pipe arranged so that the liquid contents form a seal which prevents the escape of noxious gases, but permits the flow of liquids. 

  • Trapshooting. 

  • A trick or arrangement designed to catch someone in a more general sense; a snare. 

  • A geological structure that creates a petroleum reservoir. 

  • A successful landing on an aircraft carrier using the carrier's arresting gear. 

  • Any device used to hold and suddenly release an object. 

  • Belongings. 

  • The game of trapball itself. 

  • A cubicle (in a public toilet). 

  • A vehicle, residential building, or sidewalk corner where drugs are manufactured, packaged, or sold. 

  • A fictional character from anime, or related media, who is coded as or has qualities typically associated with a gender other than the character's ostensible gender; otokonoko, josou. 

  • A machine or other device designed to catch (and sometimes kill) animals, either by holding them in a container, or by catching hold of part of the body. 

  • A mining license inspector during the Australian gold rush. 

  • An area, especially of a city, with a low level of opportunity and a high level of poverty and crime; a ghetto; a hood. 

  • A light two-wheeled carriage with springs. 

  • Someone who is anatomically male but who passes as female. 

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