full house vs hulk

full house

noun
  • A situation in which a place is filled with people to its maximum capacity. 

  • A hand that consists of three of a kind and a pair. 

adj
  • Having ammunition loaded to full allowable power, usually in reference to magnum handgun cartridges and shotgun shells. 

hulk

noun
  • A large structure with a dominating presence. 

  • An excessively muscled person. 

  • A big (and possibly clumsy) person. 

  • A non-functional but floating ship, usually stripped of equipment and rigging, and often put to other uses such as accommodation or storage. 

verb
  • To temporarily house (goods, people, etc.) in such a hulk. 

  • To be a hulk, that is, a large, hulking, and often imposing presence. 

  • Of a (large) person: to act or move slowly and clumsily. 

  • To remove the entrails of; to disembowel. 

  • To reduce (a ship) to a non-functional hulk. 

  • To move (a large, hulking body). 

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