native vs oneth

native

adj
  • Belonging to one by birth. 

  • Arising by birth; having an origin; born. 

  • Which occurs of its own accord in a given locality, to be contrasted with a species introduced by humans. 

  • Naturally related; cognate; connected (with). 

  • Characteristic of or relating to people inhabiting a region from prehistoric times. 

  • Original; constituting the original substance of anything. 

  • Born or grown in the region in which it lives or is found; not foreign or imported. 

  • Pertaining to the system or architecture in question. 

  • Occurring naturally in its pure or uncombined form. 

noun
  • A person who is native to a place; a person who was born in a place. 

  • A person of aboriginal descent, as distinguished from a person who was or whose ancestors were foreigners or settlers/colonizers. Alternative letter-case form of Native (aboriginal inhabitant of the Americas or Australia). 

  • Ostrea edulis, a kind of oyster. 

  • A native speaker. 

oneth

adj
  • 'first', or other ordinal derivatives of 'one', such as hundred-and-oneth or minus-oneth 

  • Used at the end of algebraic expressions indicating ordinal position that end in 1, such as (k+1)ᵗʰ 

noun
  • A fractional part of an integer ending in one 

  • An ordinal value that is represented by an expression ending in 1 such as the (n + 1)th. 

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