bail vs dipper

bail

noun
  • A person who bails water out of a boat. 

  • Release from imprisonment on payment of such money. 

  • Security, usually a sum of money, exchanged for the release of an arrested person as a guarantee of that person's appearance for trial. 

  • A frame to restrain a cow during milking or feeding. 

  • A bucket or scoop used for removing water from a boat etc. 

  • The person providing such payment. 

  • A hoop, ring or handle (especially of a kettle or bucket). 

  • One of the two wooden crosspieces that rest on top of the stumps to form a wicket. 

  • A stall for a cow (or other animal) (usually tethered with a semi-circular hoop). 

  • A hoop, ring, or other object used to connect a pendant to a necklace. 

  • Normally curved handle suspended between sockets as a drawer pull. This may also be on a kettle or pail. 

  • A hinged bar as a restraint for animals, or on a typewriter. 

verb
  • To keep (a traveller) detained in order to rob them; to corner (a wild animal); loosely, to detain, hold up. 

  • To secure the release of an arrested person by providing bail. 

  • To secure the head of a cow during milking. 

  • To hand over personal property to be held temporarily by another as a bailment. 

  • To release a person under such guarantee. 

  • To remove water from (a boat) by scooping it out. 

  • To remove (water) from a boat by scooping it out. 

  • To secure (a cow) by placing its head in a bail for milking. 

  • To set free; to deliver; to release. 

  • To fail to meet a commitment (to a person). 

  • To exit quickly. 

  • To confine. 

dipper

noun
  • A person employed to assist a bather in and out of the sea. 

  • A Baptist or Dunker. 

  • A person employed in a tin plate works to coat steel plates in molten tin by dipping them. 

  • Any snack food intended to be dipped in sauce. 

  • The control in a vehicle that switches between high-beam and low-beam (i.e. dips the lights), especially when used to signal other vehicles. 

  • A cup-shaped vessel with a long handle, for dipping into and ladling out liquids; a ladle or scoop. 

  • Any of various small passerine birds of the genus Cinclus that live near fast-flowing streams and feed along the bottom. 

  • A pickpocket. 

  • One who, or that which, dips (immerses something, or itself, into a liquid). 

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