perfect tense vs win

perfect tense

noun
  • Often, specifically, the present perfect tense as distinguished from the past perfect and future perfect tenses. 

  • A verb form indicating that an action or state has been completed at the present time, in the past, or shall be completed in the future. 

win

noun
  • Pleasure; joy; delight. 

  • A feat carried out successfully; a victorious achievement. 

  • An individual victory. 

verb
  • To obtain (someone) by wooing; to make an ally or friend of (frequently with over). 

  • To defeat or surpass someone or something. 

  • To triumph or achieve victory in (a game, a war, etc.). 

  • To achieve victory. 

  • To have power, coercion or control. 

  • To reach some destination or object, despite difficulty or toil (now usually intransitive, with preposition or locative adverb). 

  • To obtain (something desired). 

  • To cause a victory for someone. 

  • To extract (ore, coal, etc.). 

  • To dry by exposure to the wind. 

  • To gain (a prize) by succeeding in competition or contest. 

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