rope vs skip

rope

verb
  • To climb by means of a rope or ropes. 

  • To commit suicide, particularly by hanging. 

  • To throw a rope (or something similar, e.g. a lasso, cable, wire, etc.) around (something). 

  • To tie (something) with rope. 

  • To be formed into rope; to draw out or extend into a filament or thread. 

  • My life is a mess; I might as well rope. 

noun
  • A cohesive strand of something. 

  • A kind of chaff (material dropped to interfere with radar) consisting of foil strips with paper chutes attached. 

  • A shot of semen that a man releases during ejaculation. 

  • Cordage of at least 1 inch in diameter, or a length of such cordage. 

  • A data structure resembling a string, using a concatenation tree in which each leaf represents a character. 

  • A necklace of at least 1 meter in length. 

  • A hard line drive. 

  • The small intestines. 

  • Semen being ejaculated. 

  • Death by hanging. 

  • An individual length of such material. 

  • A unit of distance equivalent to the distance covered in six months by a god flying at ten million miles per second. 

  • A long thin segment of soft clay, either extruded or formed by hand. 

  • Rohypnol. 

  • Thick strings, yarn, monofilaments, metal wires, or strands of other cordage that are twisted together to form a stronger line. 

skip

verb
  • To jump rope. 

  • To move by hopping on alternate feet. 

  • To cause the stylus to jump back to the previous loop of the record's groove, continously repeating that part of the sound, as a result of excessive scratching or wear. 

  • To skim, ricochet or bounce over a surface. 

  • To pass by a stitch as if it were not there, continuing with the next stitch. 

  • To place an item in a skip (etymology 2, sense 1). 

  • To throw (something), making it skim, ricochet, or bounce over a surface. 

  • To disregard, miss or omit part of a continuation (some item or stage). 

  • To have insufficient ink transfer. 

  • To leap about lightly. 

  • Not to attend (some event, especially a class or a meeting). 

  • To leave, especially in a sudden and covert manner. 

  • To leap lightly over. 

noun
  • A large open-topped container for waste, designed to be lifted onto the back of a truck to remove it along with its contents. (see also skep). 

  • A college servant. 

  • A skip car. 

  • The player who calls the shots and traditionally throws the last two rocks. 

  • An Australian of Anglo-Celtic descent. 

  • A leaping, jumping or skipping movement. 

  • The scoutmaster of a troop of scouts (youth organization) and their form of address to him. 

  • The act of passing over an interval from one thing to another; an omission of a part. 

  • A wheeled basket used in cotton factories. 

  • A skep, or basket, such as a creel or a handbasket. 

  • A person who attempts to disappear so as not to be found. 

  • A charge of syrup in the pans. 

  • A passage from one sound to another by more than a degree at once. 

  • skywave propagation 

  • The captain of a sports team. Also, a form of address by the team to the captain. 

  • The captain of a bowls team, who directs the team's tactics and rolls the side's last wood, so as to be able to retrieve a difficult situation if necessary. 

  • A beehive. 

  • A transportation container in a mine, usually for ore or mullock. 

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