provincial vs raw

provincial

noun
  • A country bumpkin. 

  • A person belonging to a province; one who is provincial. 

  • A monastic superior, who, under the general of his order, has the direction of all the religious houses of the same fraternity in a given district, called a province of the order. 

adj
  • Not cosmopolitan; backwoodsy, hick, yokelish, countrified; not polished; rude 

  • Narrow; illiberal. 

  • Constituting a province. 

  • Of or pertaining to a province. 

  • Limited in outlook; narrow. 

  • Exhibiting the ways or manners of a province; characteristic of the inhabitants of a province. 

  • Of or pertaining to an ecclesiastical province, or to the jurisdiction of an archbishop; not ecumenical. 

raw

noun
  • A galled place; an inveterate sore. 

  • A recording or rip of a show that has not been fansubbed. 

  • A point about which a person is particularly sensitive. 

  • An unprocessed sugar; a batch of such. 

  • A scan that has not been cleaned (purged of blemishes arising from the scanning process) and has not been scanlated. 

adj
  • Candid in a representation of unpleasant facts, conditions, etc. 

  • Not treated or processed; in a natural state, unrefined, unprocessed. 

  • (of food) Not cooked. 

  • Unrefined, crude, or insensitive, especially with reference to sexual matters. 

  • Having had the skin removed or abraded; chafed, tender; exposed, lacerated. 

  • New or inexperienced. 

  • Unmasked, undisguised, strongly expressed. 

  • Uncorrected, without analysis. 

  • Crude in quality; rough, uneven, unsophisticated. 

  • Unpleasantly cold or damp. 

verb
  • To anally or vaginally penetrate without a condom. 

adv
  • Without a condom. 

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