accommodate vs eject

accommodate

verb
  • To do a favor or service for; to oblige. 

  • To adapt oneself; to be conformable or adapted; become adjusted. 

  • To change focal length in order to focus at a different distance. 

  • To provide housing for. 

  • To render fit, suitable, or correspondent; to adapt. 

  • To give consideration to; to allow for. 

  • To provide with something desired, needed, or convenient. 

  • To contain comfortably; to have space for. 

  • To provide sufficient space for 

  • To cause to come to agreement; to bring about harmony; to reconcile. 

  • To show the correspondence of; to apply or make suit by analogy; to adapt or fit, as teachings to accidental circumstances, statements to facts, etc. 

eject

verb
  • To compel (a person or persons) to leave. 

  • To cause (something) to come out of a machine. 

  • To forcefully project oneself or another occupant from an aircraft (or, rarely, another type of vehicle), typically using an ejection seat or escape capsule. 

  • To come out of a machine. 

  • To compel (a sports player) to leave the field because of inappropriate behaviour. 

  • To throw out or remove forcefully. 

noun
  • an inferred object of someone else's consciousness 

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