adjunct vs rump

adjunct

noun
  • An unmalted grain or grain product that supplements the main mash ingredient. 

  • A dispensable phrase in a clause or sentence that modifies its meaning. 

  • A constituent which is both the daughter and the sister of an X-bar. 

  • Symploce. 

  • One of a pair of morphisms which relate to each other through a pair of adjoint functors. 

  • A person associated with another, usually in a subordinate position; a colleague. 

  • A key or scale closely related to another as principal; a relative or attendant key. 

  • An appendage; something attached to something else in a subordinate capacity. 

adj
  • Added to a faculty or staff in a secondary position. 

  • Connected in a subordinate function. 

rump

noun
  • The buttocks. 

  • A cut of meat from the rump of an animal. 

  • The hindquarters of a four-legged mammal, not including its legs 

  • A remnant, as in Rump Parliament. 

verb
  • To turn one's back on, to show one's (clothed) backside to, as a sign of disrespect. 

  • To fuck. (Compare bum (verb).) 

  • To cheat. 

  • To ramble; to move (or talk) aimlessly. 

  • To move (someone or something) around. 

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