mortal vs woman

mortal

adj
  • Human; belonging or pertaining to people who are mortal. 

  • Of or relating to the time of death. 

  • Punishable by death. 

  • Affecting as if with power to kill; deathly. 

  • Very painful or tedious; wearisome. 

  • Susceptible to death by aging, sickness, injury, or wound; not immortal. 

  • Causing death; deadly, fatal, killing, lethal (now only of wounds, injuries etc.). 

  • Of a sin: involving the penalty of spiritual death, rather than merely venial. 

  • Very drunk. 

  • Fatally vulnerable. 

noun
  • A human; someone susceptible to death. 

adv
  • Mortally; enough to cause death. 

woman

adj
  • Of or relating to a woman/women; female. 

noun
  • All female humans collectively; womankind. 

  • A female person, usually an adult; a (generally adult) female sentient being, whether human, supernatural, elf, alien, etc. 

  • A wife (or sometimes a fiancée or girlfriend). 

  • A female person who is extremely fond of or devoted to a specified type of thing. (Used as the last element of a compound.) 

  • A female attendant or servant. 

  • An adult female human. 

verb
  • To furnish with, or unite to, a woman. 

  • To staff with female labor. 

  • To make effeminate or womanish. 

  • To call (a person) "woman" in a disrespectful fashion. 

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