giant vs imp

giant

noun
  • A jotun. 

  • Any of the gigantes, the race of giants in the Greek mythology. 

  • A maneuver involving a full rotation around an axis while fully extended. 

  • A star that is considerably more luminous than a main sequence star of the same temperature (e.g. red giant, blue giant). 

  • A mythical human of very great size. 

  • A tall species of a particular animal or plant. 

  • A very tall and large person. 

  • A very large organisation. 

  • A person of extraordinary strength or powers, bodily or intellectual. 

  • An Ethernet packet that exceeds the medium's maximum packet size of 1,518 bytes. 

adj
  • Very large. 

imp

noun
  • A baby Tasmanian devil. 

  • A small, mischievous sprite or a malevolent supernatural creature, somewhat comparable to a demon but smaller and less powerful, formerly regarded as the child of the devil or a demon (see sense 3.2). 

  • A mischievous child. 

verb
  • To add to or unite a object with (something) to lengthen the latter out or repair it; to eke out, enlarge, strengthen. 

  • To provide (someone or something) with wings, hence enabling them or it to soar. 

  • To engraft (a feather) on to a broken feather in a bird's wing or tail to repair it; to engraft (feathers) on to a bird, or a bird's wing or tail. 

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