no end vs ton

no end

noun
  • A great amount. 

adv
  • Exceedingly; endlessly. 

ton

noun
  • Any large, excessive, or overwhelming amount of anything. 

  • Fashionable society; those in style. 

  • The measurement ton of (US) 40 or (UK) 42 cubic feet (about 1.1 or 1.2 m³). 

  • The long ton of 2240 pounds (about 1016 kg), 20 hundredweights of 112 pounds avoirdupois each. 

  • The register ton of 100 cubic feet (about 2.83 m³). 

  • 100 pounds sterling. 

  • A speed of 100 mph. 

  • The metric ton of 1000 kilograms, 10 quintals of 100 kilograms each. 

  • 100 points. 

  • Synonym of tunny, particularly the common tunny or horse mackerel. 

  • The short ton of 2000 pounds (about 907 kg), 20 hundredweights of 100 pounds avoirdupois each. 

  • 100 runs. 

  • Fashion, the current style, the vogue. 

  • A unit of thermal power equal to 12,000 BTU/h (about 3.5 kW), approximating the idealized rate of cooling provided by uniform isothermal melting of 1 short ton of ice per day at 0°C. 

How often have the words no end and ton occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )