ghetto vs naked

ghetto

adj
  • Unseemly and indecorous or of low quality; cheap; shabby, crude. 

  • Having been raised in a ghetto in the United States. 

  • Characteristic of the style, speech, or behavior of residents of a predominantly black or other ghetto in the United States. 

  • Of or relating to a ghetto or to ghettos in general. 

noun
  • An (often walled) area of a city in which Jews are concentrated by force and law. (Used particularly of areas in medieval Italy and in Nazi-controlled Europe.) 

  • An area in which people who are distinguished by sharing something other than ethnicity concentrate or are concentrated. 

  • An (often impoverished) area of a city inhabited predominantly by members of a specific nationality, ethnicity, or race. 

  • An isolated, self-contained, segregated subsection, area or field of interest; often of minority or specialist interest. 

verb
  • To confine (a specified group of people) to a ghetto. 

naked

adj
  • Lacking or devoid of something. 

  • Bare, not covered by clothing. 

  • Without any additives, or without some component that would usually be included. 

  • Unprotected, uncovered; (by extension) without a condom. 

  • Where the writer (seller) does not own the underlying asset to cover the contract. 

  • Resourceless, poor, lacking means. 

  • Glib, without decoration, put bluntly. 

  • Unaided, unaccompanied. 

  • Barren, having no foliage, unvegetated. 

  • Characterized by the nakedness of the people concerned or to whom the described noun is attributed. 

  • Uncomfortable or vulnerable, as if missing something important. 

  • Of a singularity, not hidden within an event horizon and thus observable from other parts of spacetime. 

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