legal vs upright

legal

adj
  • (of paper or document layouts) Measuring 8½ in × 14 in (215.9 mm × 355.6 mm) (also legal-size). 

  • Relating to the law or to lawyers. 

  • Having its basis in the law. 

  • Being allowed or prescribed by law. 

  • Above the age of consent or the legal drinking age. 

  • Following the rules or syntax of a system, such as a game or a programming language. 

noun
  • Paper in sheets 8½ in × 14 in (215.9 mm × 355.6 mm). 

  • The legal department of a company. 

  • Somebody who immigrated lawfully. 

  • A spy who is attached to, and ostensibly employed by, an embassy, military outpost, etc. 

upright

adj
  • Greater in height than breadth. 

  • Of good morals; practicing ethical values. 

  • Vertical; erect 

  • Having the head approximately at a right angle with the shaft. 

  • In its proper orientation; not overturned. 

adv
  • In or into an upright position. 

noun
  • An upright piano. 

  • An upright arcade game cabinet. 

  • A leg 

  • A word clued by the successive initial, middle, or final letters of the cross-lights in a double acrostic or triple acrostic. 

  • A goal post. 

  • Any vertical part of a structure. 

verb
  • To set upright or stand back up (something that has fallen). 

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