batch vs pocket billiards

batch

noun
  • A bank; a sandbank. 

  • A graduating class; school class. 

  • The quantity of bread or other baked goods baked at one time. 

  • A set of data to be processed at one time. 

  • A quantity of anything produced at one operation. 

  • A bread roll. 

  • A field or patch of ground lying near a stream; the dale in which a stream flows. 

  • A group or collection of things of the same kind, such as a batch of letters or the next batch of business. 

adj
  • Of a process, operating for a defined set of conditions, and then halting. 

verb
  • To aggregate things together into a batch. 

  • To live as a bachelor temporarily, of a married man or someone virtually married. 

  • To handle a set of input data or requests as a batch process. 

pocket billiards

noun
  • Synonym of pocket pool 

  • Any of a family of billiards games played on a specific class of billiards table, having six receptacles called pockets along the rails, in which balls are deposited as the main goal of play. 

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