flyaway vs gleam

flyaway

noun
  • A stray hair that is difficult to style. 

  • A portable satellite television antenna. 

  • Anything that is difficult to capture or restrain. 

  • A kind of dismount from bars that incorporates one or more flips or twists. 

adj
  • Disposed to fly away; unrestrained; light and free. 

  • Flighty; frivolous 

  • Soft, light, unruly, and difficult to set into a style. 

gleam

noun
  • A bright, but intermittent or short-lived, appearance of something. 

  • An appearance of light, especially one which is indistinct or small, or short-lived. 

  • A look of joy or liveliness on one's face. 

  • An indistinct sign of something; a glimpse or hint. 

verb
  • Chiefly in conjunction with an adverb: to cause (light) to shine. 

  • To shine, especially in an indistinct or intermittent manner; to glisten, to glitter. 

  • To be strongly but briefly apparent. 

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