cake vs gelato

cake

noun
  • A rich, sweet dessert food, typically made of flour, sugar, and eggs and baked in an oven, and often covered in icing. 

  • A buttock, especially one that is exceptionally plump. 

  • Money. 

  • A small mass of baked dough, especially a thin loaf from unleavened dough. 

  • A thin wafer-shaped mass of fried batter; a griddlecake or pancake. 

  • A multi-shot fireworks assembly comprising several tubes, each with a fireworks effect, lit by a single fuse. 

  • A block of any of various dense materials. 

  • A trivially easy task or responsibility; from a piece of cake. 

  • Used to describe the doctrine of having one's cake and eating it too. 

verb
  • Coat (something) with a crust of solid material. 

  • Of blood or other liquid, to dry out and become hard. 

  • To form into a cake, or mass. 

gelato

noun
  • An Italian variant of ice cream made from milk and sugar, combined with other flavourings. The ingredients are supercooled while stirring to break up ice crystals as they form. 

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