opening vs scarification

opening

noun
  • An act or instance of making or becoming open. 

  • The first few measures of a musical composition. 

  • The first performance of a show or play by a particular troupe. 

  • A gap permitting passage through. 

  • The initial period when a show at an art gallery or museum is first opened, especially the first evening. 

  • A vacant position, especially in an array. 

  • An unoccupied employment position. 

  • In mathematical morphology, the dilation of the erosion of a set. 

  • A time available in a schedule. 

  • An opportunity, as in a competitive activity. 

  • An act or instance of beginning. 

  • The first few moves in a game. 

adj
  • Pertaining to the start or beginning of a series of events. 

  • describing the first period of play, usually up to the fall of the first wicket; describing a batsman who opens the innings or a bowler who opens the attack 

scarification

noun
  • The act of scarifying: raking the ground harshly to remove weeds, etc. 

  • A medieval form of penance in which the skin was damaged with a knife or hot iron. 

  • A route of administration for some vaccinations and tests: rather than hypodermic injection, the site is inoculated intradermally not with any injection but rather only with small, shallow pricks or scratches; the needle is not hollow. 

  • The scratching, etching, burning / branding, or superficially cutting designs, pictures, or words into the skin as a permanent body modification. 

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