boof vs kick

boof

verb
  • To get something wrong or make a mistake. 

  • To consume (drugs) rectally. 

  • To puff out in a voluminous way. 

  • (Of fish, especially barramundi) to surface quickly and catch prey by gulping, a behaviour which produces an audible sound. 

  • To conceal (a prohibited item) in one's rectum. 

  • To make this kind of jump when whitewater kayaking. 

  • To have anal sex with someone, usually as the penetrative partner (possibly with negative connotations). 

  • To make this sound. 

intj
  • A “jump” over hydraulic backwash in a high-gradient mountain river, an action analogous to a skier jumping a cliff. 

  • The sound of a blow or collision; wham. 

kick

verb
  • To reproach oneself for making a mistake or missing an opportunity. 

  • To direct to a particular place by a blow with the foot or leg. 

  • To recoil; to push by recoiling. 

  • To be emphatically excellent. 

  • To make a sharp jerking movement of the leg, as to strike something. 

  • To show opposition or resistance. 

  • To overcome (a bothersome or difficult issue or obstacle); to free oneself of (a problem). 

  • To reset (a watchdog timer). 

  • To accelerate quickly with a few pedal strokes in an effort to break away from other riders. 

  • To eject summarily. 

  • To strike or hit with the foot or other extremity of the leg. 

  • To attack (a piece) in order to force it to move. 

  • To move or push suddenly and violently. 

  • To die. 

  • To forcibly remove a participant from an online activity. 

  • To work a press by impact of the foot on a treadle. 

noun
  • Something that tickles the fancy; something fun or amusing. 

  • Any bucking motion of an object that lacks legs or feet. 

  • A pass played by kicking with the foot. 

  • The recoil of a gun. 

  • Synonym of kicker (“backlight positioned at an angle”) 

  • A hit or strike with the leg, foot or knee. 

  • The removal of a person from an online activity. 

  • A stimulation provided by an intoxicating substance. 

  • The distance traveled by kicking the ball. 

  • Piquancy. 

  • A pocket. 

  • The action of swinging a foot or leg. 

  • An increase in speed in the final part of a running race. 

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