jazz vs muck

jazz

noun
  • Semen, jizz. 

  • Something of excellent quality, the genuine article. 

  • The substance or makeup of a thing; unspecified thing(s). 

  • A musical art form rooted in West African cultural and musical expression and in the African American blues tradition, with diverse influences over time, commonly characterized by blue notes, syncopation, swing, call and response, polyrhythms and improvisation. 

  • Energy, excitement, excitability. 

  • Nonsense. 

verb
  • To play (jazz music). 

  • To destroy. 

  • To complicate. 

  • To move (around/about) in a lively or frivolous manner; to fool around. 

  • To distract or pester. 

  • To ejaculate. 

  • To enliven, brighten up, make more colourful or exciting; excite 

  • To dance to the tunes of jazz music. 

muck

noun
  • Semen. 

  • Heroin. 

  • Soft (or slimy) manure. 

  • The pile of discarded cards. 

  • Anything filthy or vile. Dirt; something that makes another thing dirty. 

  • Grub, slop, swill 

  • Slimy mud, sludge. 

verb
  • To manure with muck. 

  • To shovel muck. 

  • To vomit. 

  • To do a dirty job. 

  • To pass, to fold without showing one's cards, often done when a better hand has already been revealed. 

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