goon vs irregular

goon

noun
  • An enforcer or fighter. 

  • One hired to legally kidnap a child and forcibly transport them to a boot camp, boarding school, wilderness therapy, or a similar rehabilitation facility. 

  • A Sino-Japanese kanji pronunciation layer, considered the first Sino-Japanese kanji reading type imported into Japan. 

  • A fool; someone considered silly, stupid, awkward, or outlandish. 

  • A member of the comedy web site Something Awful. 

  • Cheap or inferior cask wine. 

  • A German guard in a prisoner-of-war camp. 

  • A wine flagon or cask. 

  • A thug; a usually muscular henchman with little intelligence. 

verb
  • To legally kidnap a child and forcibly transport them to a boot camp, boarding school, wilderness therapy, or a similar rehabilitation facility. 

  • To enter a trance-like state after masturbating and edging for a long period of time. 

  • To act like a goon; to act in an intimidating or aggressive way towards opponents. 

irregular

noun
  • A soldier who is not a member of an official military force and who may not use regular army tactics. 

  • One who does not regularly attend a venue. 

adj
  • without symmetry, regularity, or uniformity 

  • rough 

  • not regular; having sides that are not equal or angles that are not equal 

  • whose faces are not all regular polygons (or are not equally inclined to each other) 

  • nonstandard; not conforming to rules or expectations 

  • not following the regular or expected patterns of inflection in a given language 

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