bingo vs fudge

bingo

verb
  • To play all of one's seven tiles in one move in the game of Scrabble, earning a score bonus. 

  • To play the game of bingo. 

  • To give the winning cry of "bingo!" in a game. 

  • To return to base. 

noun
  • A similar game or amusement in which participants tick off themed words, phrases or pictures as these are called out, or as they are mentioned, for example during a speech or performance 

  • A game of chance for two or more players, who mark off numbers on a grid as they are announced by the caller; the game is won by the first person to call out "bingo!" or "house!" after crossing off all numbers on the grid or in one line of the grid. 

  • A play where all seven of a player's letter tiles are played, awarding a score bonus. 

  • A win in such a game. 

intj
  • Used by players of bingo to claim a win. 

  • Used when finding what one has been looking for or trying to recall, or on successful completion of a task. 

  • Used to declare "You've just made my point!" or "My point exactly!" 

adj
  • Just sufficient to return to base (or, alternatively, to divert to an alternative airfield). (also written Bingo or BINGO) 

fudge

verb
  • To cheat, especially in the game of marbles. 

  • To try to avoid giving a direct answer. 

  • To alter something from its true state, as to hide a flaw or uncertainty, deliberately but not necessarily dishonestly or immorally. 

intj
  • Used in place of fuck. 

noun
  • Chocolate fudge. 

  • Light or frothy nonsense. 

  • Fecal matter; feces. 

  • A type of very sweet candy or confection, usually made from sugar, butter, and milk or cream. 

  • A deliberately misleading or vague answer. 

  • A less than perfect decision or solution; an attempt to fix an incorrect solution after the fact. 

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