huddle vs round robin

huddle

noun
  • A brief meeting of all the players from one team that are on the field with the purpose of planning the following play. 

  • A hesitation during play to think about one's next move. 

  • A dense and disorderly crowd. 

verb
  • To form a huddle. 

  • To get together and discuss a topic. 

  • To crowd (things) together; to mingle confusedly; to assemble without order or system. 

  • To curl one's legs up to the chest and keep one's arms close to the torso; to crouch; to assume a position similar to that of an embryo in the womb. 

  • To crowd together. 

  • To do, make, or put, in haste or roughly; hence, to do imperfectly; usually with a following preposition or adverb (huddle on, huddle up, huddle together). 

  • To hesitate during play while thinking about one's next move. 

adj
  • Huddled, confused, congested. 

round robin

noun
  • The part of a tournament in which every player or team competes against each of the others in turn. 

  • A form of bet on the full set of possible combinations from a larger group (of teams, racehorses, etc.), such as the outcomes A+B, B+C and A+C from a group ABC. 

  • A petition signed in a circular fashion to disguise the order in which it was done. 

  • A method of dividing loot amongst a party of players by having the game assign in turn loot to a player or an enemy corpse to loot to a player. 

  • A form of trade, a series of exchanges in which each person in turn receives items of the same value from the previous person, finally returning to the original donor. For example in (philately) a stamp collector sends a packet of stamps to the next person on a list, who then takes the stamps he wants, replacing them with like-valued stamps, and then passing the packet to the next person on the list, until the packet ultimately returns to the original sender. 

  • A letter, with copies to multiple recipients, usually at Christmastime and often enclosed with a card, giving family news of interest to the sender. 

  • The MIDI technique of using different sampled versions of the same sound for successive notes, to avoid an unnaturally repetitive effect. 

  • A method of dividing labor between several similar subsystems, assigning tasks to each of them in turn in an attempt to use resources more equitably. 

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