bitch vs dragon

bitch

noun
  • A despicable or disagreeable, aggressive person, usually a woman. 

  • An obviously gay man. 

  • Something unforgiving and unpleasant. 

  • A female dog or other canine, particularly a recent mother. 

  • A man considered weak, effeminate, timid or pathetic in some way 

  • A queen. 

  • Place; situation 

  • A complaint, especially when the complaint is unjustified. 

  • A difficult or confounding problem. 

  • A woman. 

  • Friend. 

  • A submissive person who does what others want; (prison slang) a man forced or coerced into a homoerotic relationship. 

  • A queen playing card, particularly the queen of spades in the card game of hearts. 

verb
  • To spoil, to ruin. 

  • To criticize spitefully, often for the sake of complaining rather than in order to have the problem corrected. 

  • To behave or act as a bitch. 

dragon

noun
  • A fierce and unpleasant woman; a harridan. 

  • In Western mythology, a gigantic beast, typically reptilian with leathery bat-like wings, lion-like claws, scaly skin and a serpent-like body, often a monster with fiery breath. 

  • A background process similar to a daemon. 

  • A Komodo dragon. 

  • Something very formidable or dangerous. 

  • The (historical) Chinese empire or the People's Republic of China. 

  • A transvestite man, or more broadly a male-to-female transgender person. 

  • A type of playing-tile (red dragon, green dragon, white dragon) in the game of mahjong. 

  • In Eastern mythology, a large, snake-like monster with the eyes of a hare, the horns of a stag and the claws of a tiger, usually beneficent. 

  • Any of various agamid lizards of the genera Draco, Physignathus or Pogona. 

  • A variety of carrier pigeon. 

  • A legendary serpentine or reptilian creature. 

  • A short musket hooked to a swivel attached to a soldier's belt; so called from a representation of a dragon's head at the muzzle. 

  • The constellation Draco. 

  • A luminous exhalation from marshy ground, seeming to move through the air like a winged serpent. 

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