come vs hum

come

verb
  • To move towards the speaker. 

  • To do something by chance, without intending to do it. 

  • To carry through; to succeed in. 

  • To begin to have an opinion or feeling. 

  • To take a position relative to something else in a sequence. 

  • To become butter by being churned. 

  • Happen. 

  • To have a certain social background. 

  • To move from further away to nearer to. 

  • To move towards the listener. 

  • To move towards the object that is the focus of the sentence. 

  • To appear, to manifest itself. 

  • To be or have been a resident or native. 

  • To approach a state of being or accomplishment. 

  • To be supplied, or made available; to exist. 

  • To move towards an unstated agent. 

  • To begin (at a certain location); to radiate or stem (from). 

  • To move towards the agent or subject of the main clause. 

  • To achieve orgasm; to cum; to ejaculate. 

  • To germinate. 

  • To pretend to be; to behave in the manner of. 

  • To take a particular approach or point of view in regard to something. 

  • To arrive. 

  • To have been brought up by or employed by. 

prep
  • Used to indicate a point in time at or after which a stated event or situation occurs. 

intj
  • An exclamation to express annoyance. 

  • An exclamation to express encouragement, or to precede a request. 

noun
  • Semen 

  • Female ejaculatory discharge. 

hum

verb
  • To express by humming. 

  • To produce low sounds which blend continuously 

  • To reek, smell bad. 

  • To make a sound from the vocal chords without pronouncing any real words, with one's lips closed. 

  • To drone like certain insects naturally do in motion, or sounding similarly 

  • To buzz, be busily active like a beehive 

intj
  • Synonym of um: a noise indicating doubt, uncertainty, &c. 

  • Synonym of hmm: a noise indicating thought, consideration, &c. 

noun
  • Unpleasant odour. 

  • A phenomenon, or collection of phenomena, involving widespread reports of a persistent and invasive low-frequency humming, rumbling, or droning noise not audible to all people. 

  • Busy activity, like the buzz of a beehive. 

  • A hummed tune, i.e. created orally with lips closed. 

  • An often indistinct sound resembling human humming. 

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