OK vs enable

OK

verb
  • To approve. 

  • To confirm by activating a button marked OK. 

intj
  • Used to indicate acknowledgement or acceptance. 

  • Used to dismiss a dialog box or confirm a prompt. 

  • Used to introduce a sentence in order to draw attention to the importance of what is being said. 

  • Used in turn-taking, serving as a request to the speaker to grant the turn to the interrupter. 

name
  • United States postal abbreviation for Oklahoma, a state of the United States of America. 

adj
  • All right, acceptable, permitted. 

  • In good health or a good emotional state. 

  • Satisfactory, reasonably good; not exceptional. 

  • Satisfied (with); willing to accept a state of affairs. 

noun
  • Karaoke. 

  • Endorsement; approval. 

adv
  • Satisfactorily, sufficiently well. 

enable

verb
  • To qualify or approve for some role or position; to render sanction or authorization to; to confirm suitability for. 

  • To yield the opportunity or provide the possibility for something; to provide with means, opportunities, and the like. 

  • To imply or tacitly confer excuse for an action or a behavior. 

  • To activate, to make operational (especially of a function of an electronic or mechanical device). 

  • To affirm; to make firm and strong. 

  • To put a circuit element into action by supplying a suitable input pulse. 

  • To make somebody able (to do, or to be, something); to give sufficient ability or power to do or to be; to give strength or ability to. 

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