brick vs tessellate

brick

verb
  • To make into bricks. 

  • To blunder; to screw up. 

  • To build, line, or form with bricks. 

  • To hit someone or something with a brick. 

  • To make an electronic device nonfunctional and usually beyond repair, essentially making it no more useful than a brick. 

noun
  • A shot which misses, particularly one which bounces directly out of the basket because of a too-flat trajectory, as if the ball were a heavier object. 

  • A power brick; an external power supply consisting of a small box with an integral male power plug and an attached electric cord terminating in another power plug. 

  • A hardened rectangular block of mud, clay etc., used for building. 

  • The colour brick red. 

  • An electronic device, especially a heavy box-shaped one, that has become non-functional or obsolete. 

  • A projectile. 

  • Such hardened mud, clay, etc. considered collectively, as a building material. 

  • A carton of 500 rimfire cartridges, which forms the approximate size and shape of a brick. 

  • A kilogram of cocaine. 

  • Something shaped like a brick. 

  • A community card (usually the turn or the river) which does not improve a player's hand. 

adj
  • Extremely cold. 

tessellate

verb
  • To cover with tiles or stones, as a mosaic; to tile. 

  • To completely fill (an area) when multiple copies of one or more two-dimensional shapes are placed edge to edge. 

  • Of a two-dimensional shape, such that multiple copies of itself placed edge to edge cover an area leaving no space between the shapes. 

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