dry vs rich

dry

adj
  • Amusing without showing amusement. 

  • Free from or lacking alcohol or alcoholic beverages. 

  • Involving computations rather than work with biological or chemical matter. 

  • Without a usual complement or consummation; impotent. 

  • Of a bite from an animal: not containing the usual venom. 

  • Of a mass, service, or rite: involving neither consecration nor communion. 

  • Describing an area where sales of alcoholic or strong alcoholic beverages are banned. 

  • Athirst, eager. 

  • Low in sugar; lacking sugar; unsweetened. 

  • Free from applied audio effects (especially reverb). 

  • Not using afterburners or water injection for increased thrust. 

  • Exhibiting precise execution lacking delicate contours or soft transitions of color. 

  • Lacking interest, boring. 

  • Built without or lacking mortar. 

  • Free from or lacking moisture. 

  • Free from or lacking embellishment or sweetness 

  • Unable to produce a liquid, as water, (petrochemistry) oil, or (farming) milk. 

  • Anhydrous: free from or lacking water in any state, regardless of the presence of other liquids. 

verb
  • To remove moisture from. 

  • To lose moisture. 

  • To exhaust; to cause to run dry. 

  • For an actor to forget his or her lines while performing. 

noun
  • The process by which something is dried. 

  • The dry season. 

  • A prohibitionist (of alcoholic beverages). 

  • Unsweetened ginger ale; dry ginger. 

  • A radical or hard-line Conservative; especially, one who supported the policies of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s. 

  • An area of waterless country. 

  • An area with little or no rain, or sheltered from it. 

rich

adj
  • Very amusing. 

  • Of a solute-solvent solution: not weak (not diluted); of strong concentration. 

  • Ridiculous, absurd, outrageous, preposterous, especially in a galling, hypocritical, or brazen way. 

  • Elaborate, having complex formatting, multimedia, or depth of interaction. 

  • Having an intense fatty or sugary flavour. 

  • Plentiful, abounding, abundant, fulfilling. 

  • Of a fuel-air mixture: having more fuel (thus less air) than is necessary to burn all of the fuel; less air- or oxygen- rich than necessary for a stoichiometric reaction. 

  • Wealthy: having a lot of money and possessions. 

  • Yielding large returns; productive or fertile; fruitful. 

  • Trading at a price level which is high relative to historical trends, a similar asset, or (for derivatives) a theoretical value. 

  • Composed of valuable or costly materials or ingredients; procured at great outlay; highly valued; precious; sumptuous; costly. 

  • Remunerative. 

  • Not faint or delicate; vivid. 

noun
  • The rich people of a society or the world collectively, the rich class of a society. 

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