buff vs or

buff

noun
  • A military coat made of buff leather. 

  • Any substance used to dilute (street) drugs in order to increase profits. 

  • Undyed leather from the skin of buffalo or similar animals. 

  • A buffalo, or the meat of a buffalo. 

  • The greyish viscid substance constituting the buffy coat. 

  • Compressive coupler force that occurs during a slack bunched condition. 

  • A brownish yellow colour. 

  • A tool, often one covered with buff leather, used for polishing. 

  • A person who is very interested in a particular subject. 

  • An effect that makes a character or item stronger. 

  • The bare skin. 

verb
  • To strike. 

  • To polish and make shiny by rubbing. 

  • To make a character or an item stronger. 

  • To modify a medical chart, especially in a dishonest manner. 

adj
  • Of the color of buff leather, a brownish yellow. 

  • Physically attractive. 

  • Unusually muscular. 

or

noun
  • The gold or yellow tincture on a coat of arms. 

  • or 

conj
  • Connects at least two alternative words, phrases, clauses, sentences, etc., each of which could make a passage true. 

  • Otherwise (a consequence of the condition that the previous is false). 

  • Connects two equivalent names. 

  • An operator denoting the disjunction of two propositions or truth values. There are two forms, the inclusive or and the exclusive or. 

  • Counts the elements before and after as two possibilities. 

prep
  • Before; ere. Followed by "ever" or "ere". 

adj
  • Of gold or yellow tincture on a coat of arms. 

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