bugger vs prosumer

bugger

noun
  • A foolish or worthless person or thing; a despicable person. 

  • One who sets a bug (surveillance device); one who bugs. 

  • Someone who commits buggery; a sodomite. 

  • A situation that is aggravating or causes dismay; a pain. 

  • Someone who is very fond of something 

  • Someone viewed with affection; a chap. 

  • A whippersnapper, a tyke. 

intj
  • An expression of annoyance or displeasure. 

verb
  • To have anal sex with, sodomize. 

  • To feel contempt for some person or thing. 

  • To feel frustration with something, or to consider that something is futile. 

  • To be fatigued. 

  • To be surprised. 

  • To break or ruin. 

prosumer

noun
  • A serious, enthusiastic consumer: not professional (earning money), but of similar interest and skills to a (generally lower level) professional, or aspiring to such. The target market of prosumer equipment. 

  • A person in postindustrial society who combines the economic roles of producer and consumer 

adj
  • Targeted at serious, enthusiastic consumers, incorporating professional features but often modified for non-professional use. 

  • high-end 

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