baby vs breadcrumb

baby

noun
  • A form of address to a person considered to be attractive. 

  • Unborn young; a fetus. 

  • A pet project or responsibility. 

  • An affectionate term for anything. 

  • The lastborn of a family; the youngest sibling, irrespective of age. 

  • A very young human, particularly from conception or birth to a couple of years old or until walking is fully mastered. 

  • A concept or creation endeared by its creator. 

  • One who is new to an identity or community. 

  • A term of endearment used to refer to or address one's girlfriend, boyfriend or spouse. 

  • A person's romantic partner. 

  • Any very young animal, especially a vertebrate; many species have specific names for their babies, such as kittens for the babies of cats, puppies for the babies of dogs, and chicks for the babies of birds. See Category:Baby animals for more. 

  • A person who is immature, infantile or feeble. 

  • A person who is new to or inexperienced in something. 

adj
  • Like or pertaining to a baby, in size or youth; small, young. 

  • Picked when small and immature (as in baby corn, baby potatoes). 

  • Newest (overall, or in some group or state), most inexperienced. 

verb
  • To tend (something) with care; to be overly attentive to (something), fuss over. 

  • To coddle; to pamper somebody like an infant. 

breadcrumb

noun
  • One in a series of clues leading to a person or place. 

  • A single link in a chain indicating the hierarchical location of a directory, web page or similar, used as a navigation aid. 

  • A tiny piece of bread, either one that falls from bread as it is cut or eaten, or one made deliberately by crumbling bread. 

verb
  • To add navigational breadcrumbs to (a web page or user interface). 

  • To use clues or enticements to lead someone in the desired direction. 

  • To sprinkle breadcrumbs on to food, normally before cooking. 

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