condition vs lemma

condition

noun
  • A logical clause or phrase that a conditional statement uses. The phrase can either be true or false. 

  • A requirement or requisite. 

  • The health status of a medical patient. 

  • A certain abnormal state of health; a malady or sickness. 

  • A clause in a contract or agreement indicating that a certain contingency may modify the principal obligation in some way. 

  • The state or quality. 

  • A particular state of being. 

verb
  • To place conditions or limitations upon. 

  • To treat (the hair) with hair conditioner. 

  • To test or assay, as silk (to ascertain the proportion of moisture it contains). 

  • To contract; to stipulate; to agree. 

  • To subject to the process of acclimation. 

  • To shape the behaviour of someone to do something. 

  • To impose upon an object those relations or conditions without which knowledge and thought are alleged to be impossible. 

  • To put under conditions; to require to pass a new examination or to make up a specified study, as a condition of remaining in one's class or in college. 

  • To make dependent on a condition to be fulfilled; to make conditional on. 

  • To subject to different conditions, especially as an exercise. 

lemma

noun
  • A proposition proved or accepted for immediate use in the proof of some other proposition. 

  • The outer shell of a fruit or similar body. 

  • One of the specialized bracts around the floret in grasses. 

  • The canonical form of an inflected word; i.e., the form usually found as the headword in a dictionary, such as the nominative singular of a noun, the bare infinitive of a verb, etc. 

  • The theoretical abstract conceptual form of a word, representing a specific meaning, before the creation of a specific phonological form as the sounds of a lexeme, which may find representation in a specific written form as a dictionary or lexicographic word. 

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