driver vs muck

driver

noun
  • A mallet. 

  • A person who drives some other vehicle. 

  • A golf club used to drive the ball a great distance. 

  • One who drives something, in any sense of the verb drive. 

  • A cooper's hammer for driving on barrel hoops. 

  • A screwdriver. 

  • a kind of sail, smaller than a fore and aft spanker on a square-rigged ship, a driver is tied to the same spars. 

  • Something that drives something, in any sense of the verb drive. 

  • A pilot (person who flies aircraft). 

  • A device driver; a program that acts as an interface between an application and hardware, written specifically for the device it controls. 

  • A person who drives a motorized vehicle such as a car or a bus. 

  • A tamping iron. 

muck

noun
  • Semen. 

  • Heroin. 

  • Soft (or slimy) manure. 

  • The pile of discarded cards. 

  • Anything filthy or vile. Dirt; something that makes another thing dirty. 

  • Grub, slop, swill 

  • Slimy mud, sludge. 

verb
  • To manure with muck. 

  • To shovel muck. 

  • To vomit. 

  • To do a dirty job. 

  • To pass, to fold without showing one's cards, often done when a better hand has already been revealed. 

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