bake vs quench

bake

verb
  • To be warmed to drying and hardening. 

  • To incorporate into something greater. 

  • To cause to be hot. 

  • To be hot. 

  • To cook (something) in an oven (for someone). 

  • To dry by heat. 

  • To smoke marijuana. 

  • To fix (lighting, reflections, etc.) as part of the texture of an object to improve rendering performance. 

  • To be cooked in an oven. 

noun
  • A small, flat (or ball-shaped) cake of dough eaten in Barbados and sometimes elsewhere, similar in appearance and ingredients to a pancake but fried (or in some places sometimes roasted). 

  • Any of various baked dishes resembling casserole. 

  • Any food item that is baked. 

  • The act of cooking food by baking. 

  • A social event at which food (such as seafood) is baked, or at which baked food is served. 

quench

verb
  • To cool rapidly by direct contact with liquid coolant, as a blacksmith quenching hot iron. 

  • To satisfy, especially a literal or figurative thirst. 

  • To rapidly change the parameters of a physical system. 

  • To extinguish or put out (as a fire or light). 

  • To terminate or greatly diminish (a chemical reaction) by destroying or deforming the remaining reagents. 

  • To rapidly terminate the operation of a superconducting electromagnet by causing part or all of the magnet's windings to enter the normal, resistive state. 

noun
  • The abnormal termination of operation of a superconducting magnet, occurring when part of the superconducting coil enters the normal (resistive) state. 

  • A rapid change of the parameters of a physical system. 

  • The act of quenching something; the fact of being quenched. 

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