ether vs warm

ether

verb
  • To viciously humiliate or insult. 

noun
  • The sky, the heavens; the void, nothingness. 

  • Starting fluid. 

  • Diethyl ether (C₄H₁₀O), an organic compound with a sweet odour used in the past as an anaesthetic. 

  • The medium breathed by human beings; the air. 

  • A particular quality created by or surrounding an object, person, or place; an atmosphere, an aura. 

  • Any of a class of organic compounds containing an oxygen atom bonded to two hydrocarbon groups. 

  • The atmosphere or space as a medium for broadcasting radio and television signals; also, a notional space through which Internet and other digital communications take place; cyberspace. 

  • Often as aether and more fully as luminiferous aether: a substance once thought to fill all unoccupied space that allowed electromagnetic waves to pass through it and interact with matter, without exerting any resistance to matter or energy; its existence was disproved by the 1887 Michelson–Morley experiment and the theory of relativity propounded by Albert Einstein (1879–1955). 

warm

verb
  • To scold or abuse verbally. 

  • To become ardent or animated. 

  • To make engaged or earnest; to interest; to engage; to excite ardor or zeal in; to enliven. 

  • To become warm, to heat up. 

  • (sometimes in the form warm up) To favour increasingly. 

  • To prepopulate (a cache) so that its contents are ready for other users. 

  • To make or keep warm. 

  • To beat or spank. 

adj
  • Caring and friendly, of relations to another person. 

  • Having a color in the red-orange-yellow part of the visible electromagnetic spectrum. 

  • Having a temperature slightly higher than usual, but still pleasant; mildly hot. 

  • Close, often used in the context of a game in which "warm" and "cold" are used to indicate nearness to the goal. 

  • Fresh, of a scent; still able to be traced. 

  • Communicating a sense of comfort, ease, or pleasantness 

noun
  • The act of warming, or the state of being warmed; a heating. 

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