squeegee vs wipe

squeegee

noun
  • A tool used to remove excess moisture from a print. 

  • A street-cleaning machine consisting of a roller made of squeegee blades pulled by a horse. 

  • A short-handled tool, especially as used on car windshields and home windows. 

  • A long-handled tool used on ships for swabbing the decks and spreading protective coatings. 

  • Similar long-handled tools used for drying or leveling surfaces such as paths and roadways. 

  • A tool used to force the ink through the stencil in silk-screen printing. 

  • A person who uses a squeegee, especially one who "cleans" the windshield of a car stopped at a traffic light and then demands payment. 

verb
  • To use a squeegee. 

wipe

noun
  • A soft piece of cloth or cloth-like material used for wiping. 

  • A kind of film transition where one shot replaces another by travelling from one side of the frame to another or with a special shape. 

  • A lapwing, especially a northern lapwing (Vanellus vanellus). 

  • The act of wiping something. 

  • An instance of all members of a party dying in a single campaign, event, or battle; a wipeout. 

verb
  • To erase. 

  • To move an object over, maintaining contact, with the intention of removing some substance from the surface. (Compare rub.) 

  • To have all members of a party die in a single campaign, event, or battle; to be wiped out. 

  • To clean (the buttocks) after defecation. 

  • To deperm (a ship). 

  • To remove by rubbing; to rub off; to obliterate; usually followed by away, off, or out. 

  • To make (a joint, as between pieces of lead pipe), by surrounding the junction with a mass of solder, applied in a plastic condition by means of a rag with which the solder is shaped by rubbing. 

  • To remove an expression from one's face. 

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