gin vs greenfly

gin

noun
  • A cotton gin. 

  • A snare or trap for game. 

  • A windpump. 

  • An Aboriginal woman. 

  • A colourless non-aged alcoholic liquor made by distilling fermented grains such as barley, corn, oats or rye with juniper berries; the base for many cocktails. 

  • An instrument of torture worked with screws. 

  • Gin rummy. 

  • Drawing the best card or combination of cards. 

  • A hoisting drum, usually vertical; a whim. 

  • A pile driver. 

  • A machine for raising or moving heavy objects, consisting of a tripod formed of poles united at the top, with a windlass, pulleys, ropes, etc. 

verb
  • To trap something in a gin. 

  • To remove the seeds from cotton with a cotton gin. 

conj
  • If. 

greenfly

noun
  • Lucilia sericata, common green bottle fly 

  • Certain aphids (Aphidoidea), commonly known as greenfly in Britain and the Commonwealth 

  • especially, Myzus persicae, green peach aphid 

  • Odontomyia chloris (syn. Musca chloris) 

  • Tabanus nigrovittatus, a biting horsefly more commonly known as the greenhead horsefly, greenhead fly, or greenhead 

  • Any of several kinds of common insects green in color 

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