exchange vs inversion

exchange

noun
  • The loss of one piece and associated capture of another. 

  • The transfer of substances or elements like gas, amino-acids, ions etc. sometimes through a surface like a membrane. 

  • The fourth through sixth digits of a ten-digit phone number (the first three before the introduction of area codes). 

  • The loss of a minor piece (typically a bishop or knight) and associated capture of the more advantageous rook. 

  • A telephone exchange. 

  • A conversation. 

  • An act of exchanging or trading. 

  • The difference between the values of money in different places. 

  • A place for conducting trading. 

verb
  • To trade or barter. 

  • To replace with, as a substitute. 

  • To recommend and get recommendations. 

inversion

noun
  • The action of inverting. 

  • The position of a chord which has a note other than the root as its bass note. 

  • A situation where air temperature increases with altitude (the ground being colder than the surrounding air). 

  • A section of a roller coaster where passengers are temporarily turned upside down. 

  • An operation on a group, analogous to negation. 

  • The reversal of an interval; the move of one pitch in an interval up or down an octave. 

  • The flipping of a melody or contrapuntal line so that high notes become low and vice versa; the reversal of a pitch contour. 

  • Deviation from standard word order by putting the predicate before the subject. It takes place in questions with auxiliary verbs and in normal, affirmative clauses beginning with a negative particle, for the purpose of emphasis. 

  • A segment of DNA in the context of a chromosome that is reversed in orientation relative to a reference karyotype or genome. 

  • The act of being in an inverted state; being upside down, inside out, or in a reverse sequence. 

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