easiness vs kink

easiness

noun
  • Looseness or pliancy, often derogatory 

  • Freedom from inhibition and awkwardness: grace. 

  • Lack of harshness: gentleness, kindness. 

  • Freedom from discomfort and worry: comfort. 

  • Lack of concern or care: carelessness, indolence. 

  • Lack of difficulty; quality of not being frustrating, difficult, or dense (compact). 

  • Lack of firm conviction: gullibility, credulity. 

  • Lack of difficulty or trouble: facility; simplicity. 

kink

verb
  • To laugh loudly. 

  • To be formed into a kink or twist. 

  • To form a kink or twist. 

  • To gasp for breath as in a severe fit of coughing. 

noun
  • A convulsive fit of coughing or laughter; a sonorous indraft of breath; a whoop; a gasp of breath caused by laughing, coughing, or crying. 

  • A positive 1-soliton solution to the sine-Gordon equation. 

  • A tight curl, twist, or bend in a length of thin material, hair etc. 

  • An unreasonable notion; a crotchet; a whim; a caprice. 

  • A difficulty or flaw that is likely to impede operation, as in a plan or system. 

  • Peculiarity or deviation in sexual behaviour or taste. 

  • A person with peculiar sexual tastes. 

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