sundry vs top-up

sundry

noun
  • A minor miscellaneous item. 

  • Synonym of extra (“a run scored without the ball having hit the striker's bat”) 

  • A food item eaten as an accompaniment to a meal; a side dish; also, such an item eaten on its own as a light meal. 

adv
  • Synonym of asunder (“into separate parts or pieces”) 

pron
  • Various people or things; several. 

adj
  • Of various types, especially when numerous; diverse, varied. 

  • More than one or two but not very many; a number of, several. 

  • Consisting of an assortment of different kinds; miscellaneous. 

top-up

noun
  • An addition. 

  • The situation where a student who holds a qualification equivalent to part of a degree course is then accepted onto a degree course at an intermediate point, without having to start it from the beginning. 

  • Additional credit purchased for a mobile phone. 

  • An additional premium paid over the initial premium in order to increase benefit values. 

  • A serving of drink used to top up an existing glass. 

  • A dose of epidural anesthetic added to previously injected spinal anesthetic in combined spinal-epidural anesthesia 

adj
  • That serves as an addition 

How often have the words sundry and top-up occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )