clock vs gammon

clock

verb
  • To hit (someone) heavily. 

  • To measure the speed of. 

  • To ornament (e.g. the side of a stocking) with figured work. 

  • To identify someone as being transgender. 

  • To take notice of; to realise; to recognize someone or something. 

  • To beat a video game. 

  • To measure the duration of. 

  • To falsify the reading of the odometer of a vehicle. 

noun
  • The odometer of a motor vehicle. 

  • A pattern near the heel of a sock or stocking. 

  • An instrument that measures or keeps track of time; a non-wearable timepiece. 

  • A luck-based patience or solitaire card game with the cards laid out to represent the face of a clock. 

  • A time clock. 

  • The seed head of a dandelion. 

  • A common noun relating to an instrument that measures or keeps track of time. 

  • An electrical signal that synchronizes timing among digital circuits of semiconductor chips or modules. 

  • A CPU clock cycle, or T-state. 

  • A large beetle, especially the European dung beetle (Geotrupes stercorarius). 

gammon

verb
  • To lash with ropes (on a ship). 

  • To cure bacon by salting. 

  • To beat by a gammon (without the opponent bearing off a stone). 

noun
  • Backgammon (the game itself). 

  • A rope fastening a bowsprit to the stem of a ship (usually called a gammoning). 

  • A victory in backgammon achieved when the opponent has not borne off a single stone. 

  • A cut of quick-cured pork leg. 

  • A middle-aged or older right-wing, reactionary white man, or such men collectively. 

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