go out vs mack

go out

verb
  • To have a romantic relationship (with someone). 

  • To have a romantic relationship, one that involves going out together on dates; to be a couple. 

  • To fail. 

  • To recede; to ebb. 

  • To discard or meld all the cards in one's hand. 

  • To leave, especially a building. 

  • To sympathize with; to express positive feelings towards. 

  • To die. 

  • To spend the last moments of a show (while playing something). 

  • To pass out of fashion. 

  • To leave one's abode to go to public places, especially for recreation or entertainment. 

  • To become extinct, to expire. 

  • To be eliminated from a competition. 

  • To be turned off or extinguished. 

mack

verb
  • To seduce or flirt with. 

  • To act as pimp; to pander. 

noun
  • An element of a ship's superstructure which places the function of a ship's mast on its exhaust stack, adding the skeletal supporting structure to the smokestack to support the mast's complement of functions. 

  • A raincoat or mackintosh. 

  • An individual skilled in the art of seduction using verbal skills. 

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