crimp vs flipper

crimp

verb
  • To pinch and hold; to seize. 

  • To gash the flesh, e.g. of a raw fish, to make it crisper when cooked. 

  • To press into small ridges or folds, to pleat, to corrugate. 

  • to hold using a crimp 

  • To bend or mold leather into shape. 

  • To fasten by bending metal so that it squeezes around the parts to be fastened. 

  • To style hair into a crimp, to form hair into tight curls, to make it kinky. 

  • To impress (seamen or soldiers); to entrap, to decoy. 

noun
  • One who infringes sub-section 1 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1854, applied to a person other than the owner, master, etc., who engages seamen without a license from the Board of Trade. 

  • A small hold with little surface area. 

  • The natural curliness of wool fibres. 

  • Hair that is shaped so it bends back and forth in many short kinks. 

  • A grip on such a hold. 

  • A fastener or a fastening method that secures parts by bending metal around a joint and squeezing it together, often with a tool that adds indentations to capture the parts. 

  • An agent who procures seamen, soldiers, etc., especially by decoying, entrapping, impressing, or seducing them. 

flipper

verb
  • To lift one or both flippers out of the water and slap the surface of the water. 

noun
  • Television remote control, clicker. 

  • A type of ball bowled by a leg spin bowler, which spins backwards and skids off the pitch with a low bounce. 

  • A flat lever in a pinball machine, triggered by the player to strike the ball and keep it in play. 

  • A kind of false tooth, usually temporary. 

  • A small flat used to support a larger one. 

  • Someone who flips, in the sense of buying a house or other asset and selling it quickly for profit. 

  • Someone who flips in any other sense, for example throwing a coin. 

  • In marine mammals such as whales, a wide flat limb, adapted for swimming. 

  • A flat, wide, paddle-like rubber covering for the foot, used in swimming. 

  • A kitchen spatula. 

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