cookie vs dog

cookie

noun
  • One's eaten food (e.g. lunch, etc.), especially one's stomach contents. 

  • A magic cookie. 

  • A piece of crack cocaine, larger than a rock, and often in the shape of a cookie. 

  • The female genitalia. 

  • A small, flat, baked good which is either crisp or soft but firm. 

  • A sweet baked good (as in the previous sense) usually having chocolate chips, fruit, nuts, etc. baked into it. 

  • A bun. 

  • A cucoloris. 

  • An HTTP cookie. 

verb
  • To send a cookie to (a user, computer, etc.). 

dog

noun
  • The meat of this animal, eaten as food 

  • A hot dog: a frankfurter, wiener, or similar sausage; or a sandwich made from this. 

  • A male dog, wolf, or fox, as opposed to a bitch or vixen. 

  • A flop; a film that performs poorly at the box office. 

  • A man, guy, chap. 

  • The eighteenth Lenormand card. 

  • One of the cones used to divide up a racetrack when training horses. 

  • Something that performs poorly. 

  • Any member of the family Canidae, including domestic dogs, wolves, coyotes, jackals, foxes, and their relatives (extant and extinct); canid. 

  • A click or pallet adapted to engage the teeth of a ratchet wheel, to restrain the back action. 

  • A sexually aggressive man. 

  • Underdog. 

  • Foot. 

  • The species Canis familiaris (sometimes designated Canis lupus familiaris), domesticated for thousands of years and of highly variable appearance because of human breeding. 

  • Someone who is cowardly, worthless, or morally reprehensible. 

  • A dull, unattractive girl or woman. 

  • A metal support for logs in a fireplace. 

  • (from "dog and bone") Phone or mobile phone. 

  • Any of various mechanical devices for holding, gripping, or fastening something, particularly with a tooth-like projection. 

adj
  • Of inferior quality; dogshit. 

verb
  • To intentionally restrict one's productivity as employee; to work at the slowest rate that goes unpunished. 

  • To criticize. 

  • To pursue with the intent to catch. 

  • To divide (a watch) with a comrade. 

  • To fasten a hatch securely. 

  • To watch, or participate, in sexual activity in a public place. 

  • To follow in an annoying or harassing way. 

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