petticoat vs wrapper

petticoat

noun
  • A woman's undercoat, worn to be displayed beneath an open gown. 

  • A light woman's undergarment worn under a dress or skirt, and hanging either from the shoulders or (now especially) from the waist; a kind of slip, worn to make the skirt fuller, or for extra warmth. 

  • A woman. 

  • A fisherman's loose canvas or oilcloth skirt. 

  • A bell-mouthed piece over the exhaust nozzles in the smokebox of a locomotive, strengthening and equalising the draught through the boiler-tubes. 

  • A type of ornamental skirt or underskirt, often displayed below a dress; chiefly in plural, designating a woman's skirts collectively. 

  • A tight, usually padded undercoat worn by men over a shirt and under the doublet. 

verb
  • To dress in a petticoat. 

wrapper

noun
  • An outer garment; a loose robe or dressing gown. 

  • Something that is wrapped around something else as a cover or protection: a wrapping. 

  • One who, or that which, wraps. 

  • A construct, such as a class or module, that serves to mediate access to another. 

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