jazz vs logic

jazz

verb
  • To move (around/about) in a lively or frivolous manner; to fool around. 

  • To play (jazz music). 

  • To destroy. 

  • To complicate. 

  • To distract or pester. 

  • To ejaculate. 

  • To enliven, brighten up, make more colourful or exciting; excite 

  • To dance to the tunes of jazz music. 

noun
  • Something of excellent quality, the genuine article. 

  • The substance or makeup of a thing; unspecified thing(s). 

  • A musical art form rooted in West African cultural and musical expression and in the African American blues tradition, with diverse influences over time, commonly characterized by blue notes, syncopation, swing, call and response, polyrhythms and improvisation. 

  • Semen, jizz. 

  • Energy, excitement, excitability. 

  • Nonsense. 

logic

verb
  • To engage in excessive or inappropriate application of logic. 

  • To apply logical reasoning to. 

  • To overcome by logical argument. 

noun
  • It's hard to work out his system of logic. 

  • The study of the principles and criteria of valid inference and demonstration. 

  • The mathematical study of relationships between rigorously defined concepts and of mathematical proof of statements. 

  • The part of a system (usually electronic) that performs the boolean logic operations, short for logic gates or logic circuit. 

  • A method of human thought that involves thinking in a linear, step-by-step manner about how a problem can be solved. Logic is the basis of many principles including the scientific method. 

  • A formal or informal language together with a deductive system or a model-theoretic semantics. 

  • Any system of thought, whether rigorous and productive or not, especially one associated with a particular person. 

adj
  • logical 

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