creeper vs forest

creeper

noun
  • A treecreeper. 

  • A one-piece garment for infants designed to facilitate access to the wearer's diaper. 

  • A small four-hooked grapnel used to recover objects dropped onto the sea bed. 

  • Any device for causing material to move steadily from one part of a machine to another, such as an apron in a carding machine, or an inner spiral in a grain screen. 

  • Any plant (as ivy or periwinkle) that grows by creeping, especially a climbing plant of the genus Parthenocissus. 

  • The lowest gear of a tractor or truck. 

  • A small low iron, or dog, between the andirons. 

  • A person who creeps people out; a creepy person. 

  • A metal plate with spikes, designed to be worn with shoes to prevent slipping. 

  • An instrument with iron hooks or claws for dredging up items from a well or other water. 

  • A person or a thing that crawls or creeps. 

  • A low-profile wheeled platform whereupon an auto mechanic may lie on their back and gain better access to the underbody of a vehicle. 

  • A kind of shoe, usually with a suede upper and a thick crepe sole, associated with various 20th-century subcultures. 

  • A spur-like device strapped to the boot to facilitate climbing. 

  • A ball that travels low, near ground level. 

  • A device which allows a small child to safely roam around a room from a seated or standing position. 

forest

noun
  • The colour forest green. 

  • A dense uncultivated tract of trees and undergrowth, larger than woods. 

  • A defined area of land set aside in England as royal hunting ground or for other privileged use; all such areas. 

  • Any dense collection or amount. 

  • A group of domains that are managed as a unit. 

  • A graph with no cycles; i.e., a graph made up of trees. 

verb
  • To cover an area with trees. 

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