dodge vs recruit

dodge

noun
  • A line of work. 

  • An act of dodging. 

  • A trick, evasion or wile. (Now mainly in the expression tax dodge.) 

verb
  • To follow by dodging, or suddenly shifting from place to place. 

  • To avoid (something) by moving suddenly out of the way. 

  • To decrease the exposure for certain areas of an image in order to make them darker (compare burn). 

  • To avoid; to sidestep. 

adj
  • Dodgy. 

recruit

noun
  • A hired worker 

  • A person enlisted for service in the army; a newly enlisted soldier. 

  • A new adult or breeding-age member of a certain population. 

  • A supply of anything wasted or exhausted; a reinforcement. 

verb
  • To enroll or enlist new members or potential employees on behalf of an employer, organization, sports team, the military, etc. 

  • To become an adult or breeding-age member of a population. 

  • To prompt a protein, leucocyte. etc. to intervene in a given region of the body. 

  • To supply with new men, as an army; to fill up or make up by enlistment; also, to muster 

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