please vs put out

please

verb
  • To make happy or satisfy; to give pleasure to. 

  • To desire; to will; to be pleased by. 

adv
  • An expression of annoyance or impatience. 

  • Said as a request to repeat information. 

  • Used to make a polite request. 

  • Used as an affirmative to an offer. 

put out

verb
  • To consent to sex. 

  • To cause a player on offense to be out. 

  • To cause someone to be out of sorts; to annoy, impose, inconvenience, or disturb. 

  • To dislocate (a joint). 

  • To knock out: to eliminate from a competition. 

  • To blind (eyes). 

  • To remove from office. 

  • To go out, to head out, especially (sailing) to set sail. 

  • To broadcast, to publish. 

  • To produce, to emit. 

  • To expel. 

  • To place outside, to remove, particularly 

  • To extinguish (fire). 

  • Synonym of knock out: to render unconscious. 

  • To turn off (light). 

noun
  • The statistic of the number of outs a defensive player directly caused. 

adj
  • Taking offense; indignant. 

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