boy vs embrown

boy

verb
  • To act as a boy (in allusion to the former practice of boys acting women's parts on the stage). 

noun
  • A son of any age. 

  • A male of any age, particularly one rather younger than the speaker. 

  • A male servant, slave, assistant, or employee 

  • A younger such worker. 

  • A non-white male servant regardless of age, particularly as a form of address. 

  • Any non-white male, regardless of age. 

  • A male child or adolescent, as distinguished from infants or adults. 

  • A male (tree, gene, etc). 

  • A young male. 

  • A former low rank of various armed services; a holder of this rank. 

  • Heroin. 

  • A male animal, especially, in affectionate address, a male dog. 

intj
  • Exclamation of surprise, pleasure or longing. 

embrown

verb
  • To become or make brown; to brown. 

  • To make (something) brown; to brown. 

  • To make (something) dark or dusky (“having a rather dark shade of colour”); to brown, to darken. 

  • To become or make dark or dusky; to brown, to darken. 

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