identifier vs magnate

identifier

noun
  • One who identifies as a particular type or role; one who says and believes that they are a certain thing. 

  • A formal name used in source code to refer to a variable, function, procedure, package, etc. or in an operating system to refer to a process, user, group, etc. 

  • A primary key. 

  • Someone who identifies; a person who establishes the identity of someone or something. 

  • A guidebook that helps determine the specific class of an object (such as a mushroom, herb, fish, bird, drug, or mineral), or its individual identity (such as that of a star). 

  • Something that identifies or uniquely points to something or someone else. 

  • A code that distinguishes a particular element from all other elements in a document. 

magnate

noun
  • A person of rank, influence or distinction in any sphere. 

  • In medieval and early modern Italy, a member of a legally defined category of especially wealthy patrician families, often deprived of the right to political participation by republican governments. 

  • Powerful industrialist; captain of industry. 

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