pluck vs swill

pluck

noun
  • Cheap wine. 

  • Guts, nerve, fortitude or persistence. 

  • The lungs, heart with trachea and often oesophagus removed from slaughtered animals. 

  • An instance of plucking or pulling sharply. 

verb
  • To take or remove (someone) quickly from a particular place or situation. 

  • To pull something sharply; to pull something out 

  • To pull or twitch sharply. 

  • To remove feathers from a bird. 

  • To play a string instrument pizzicato. 

  • To gently play a single string, e.g. on a guitar, violin etc. 

  • Of a glacier: to transport individual pieces of bedrock by means of gradual erosion through freezing and thawing. 

swill

noun
  • Inexpensive beer or alcohol. 

  • A mixture of solid and liquid food scraps fed to pigs etc; especially kitchen waste for this purpose. 

  • A badly-thrown pass. 

  • Any disgusting or distasteful liquid. 

  • Anything disgusting or worthless. 

  • A large quantity of liquid drunk at one swallow. 

verb
  • To move (a liquid or liquid-filled vessel) in a circular motion. 

  • To wash (something) by flooding with water. 

  • To feed swill to (pigs). 

  • To drink (or, rarely, eat) greedily or to excess. 

  • To move around or over a surface. 

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