floss vs loofah

floss

verb
  • To clean the area between the teeth using floss. 

  • To show off, especially by exhibiting one's wealth or talent. 

  • To perform the floss dance move. 

noun
  • Fluid glass floating on iron in the puddling furnace, produced by the vitrification of oxides and earths which are present. 

  • A small stream of water. 

  • A body feather of an ostrich. 

  • The common rush (Juncus effusus). 

  • Any thread-like material having parallel strands that are not spun or wound around each other. 

  • A thread used to clean the gaps between the teeth. 

  • Raw silk fibres. 

  • The fibres covering a corncob etc.; the loose downy or silky material inside the husks of certain plants, such as beans. 

  • Spun sugar or cotton candy, especially in the phrase "candy floss". 

  • A dance move in which the dancer repeatedly swings their arms, with clenched fists, from the back of their body to the front, on each side. 

loofah

verb
  • To clean or scrub with a loofah. 

noun
  • Any bathing sponge 

  • A tropical vine, of the genus Luffa, having almost cylindrical fruit with a spongy, fibrous interior; the dishcloth gourd 

  • The dried fibrous interior used as a sponge for bathing 

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