cutter vs poker

cutter

noun
  • A knife. 

  • A light sleigh drawn by one horse. 

  • A flag or similar instrument for blocking light. 

  • A ship's boat, used for transport ship-to-ship or ship-to-shore. 

  • A foretooth; an incisor. 

  • A ball that moves sideways in the air, or off the pitch, because it has been cut. 

  • A person who practices self-injury by making cuts in the flesh. 

  • An animal yielding inferior meat, with little or no external fat and marbling. 

  • A person or device that cuts (in various senses). 

  • A ten-pence piece. So named because it is the coin most often sharpened by prison inmates to use as a weapon. 

  • A heavy-duty motor boat for official use. 

  • A single-masted, fore-and-aft rigged, sailing vessel with at least two headsails, and a mast set further aft than that of a sloop. 

  • A surgeon. 

  • A cut fastball. 

poker

noun
  • A knife. 

  • Any of various card games in which, following each of one or more rounds of dealing or revealing cards, the players in sequence make tactical bets or drop out, the bets forming a pool to be taken either by the sole remaining player or, after all rounds and bets have been completed, by those remaining players who hold a superior hand according to a standard ranking of hand values for the game. 

  • A tool like a soldering iron for making poker drawings. 

  • A kind of duck, the pochard. 

  • One who pokes. 

  • Any imagined frightful object, especially one supposed to haunt the darkness; a bugbear. 

  • All the four cards of the same rank. 

  • A metal rod, generally of wrought iron, for adjusting the burning logs or coals in a fire; a firestick. 

verb
  • To play poker. 

  • To poke with a utensil such as a poker or needle. 

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