lint vs oakum

lint

noun
  • A fine material made by scraping cotton or linen cloth; used for dressing wounds. 

  • Raw cotton ready for baling. 

  • Clinging fuzzy fluff that clings to fabric or accumulates in one's pockets or navel etc. 

  • The fibrous coat of thick hairs covering the seeds of the cotton plant. 

verb
  • To perform a static check on (source code) to detect stylistic or programmatic errors. 

oakum

noun
  • A material, consisting of tarred fibres, used to caulk or pack joints in plumbing, masonry, and wooden shipbuilding. 

  • The coarse portion separated from flax or hemp in hackling. 

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