juice vs punch

juice

noun
  • A beverage made of juice. 

  • Vitality, strength. 

  • Political power. 

  • Semen. 

  • Musical agreement between instrumentalists. 

  • The leftover liquid of some wet or damp substance. 

  • Petrol; gasoline. 

  • Electricity. 

  • Liquor. 

  • Steroids. 

  • A soft drink. 

  • A liquid from a plant, especially fruit. 

  • The liquid that is used to submerge a substance kept in a container 

  • The amount charged by a bookmaker for betting services. 

  • The vaginal lubrication that a female naturally produces when sexually aroused. 

verb
  • To extract the juice from something. 

  • To energize or stimulate something. 

  • To take a performance-enhancing drug. 

punch

noun
  • A beverage, generally containing a mixture of fruit juice and some other beverage, often alcoholic. 

  • A mechanism for punching holes in paper or other thin material. 

  • A hole or opening created with a punch. 

  • Impact. 

  • Any of various riodinid butterflies of the genus Dodona of Asia. 

  • An extension piece applied to the top of a pile; a dolly. 

  • A prop, as for the roof of a mine. 

  • Power, strength, energy. 

  • A device, generally slender and round, used for creating holes in thin material, for driving an object through a hole in a containing object, or to stamp or emboss a mark or design on a surface. 

  • A hit or strike with one's fist. 

  • A blow from something other than the fist. 

verb
  • To employ a punch to create a hole in or stamp or emboss a mark on something. 

  • To strike with one's fist. 

  • To thrust against; to poke. 

  • To enter (information) on a device or system. 

  • To herd. 

  • To mark a ticket. 

  • To make holes in something (rail ticket, leather belt, etc) 

  • To operate (a device or system) by depressing a button, key, bar, or pedal, or by similar means. 

  • In winemaking, to perform pigeage: to stamp down grape skins that float to the surface during fermentation. 

  • To hit (a ball or similar object) with less than full force. 

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