commute vs swap out

commute

verb
  • To exchange substantially; to abate but not abolish completely, a penalty, obligation, or payment in return for a great, single thing or an aggregate; to cash in; to lessen 

  • To regularly travel from one's home to one's workplace or school, or vice versa. 

  • To reduce the sentence previously given for a criminal offense. 

  • Of an operation, to be commutative, i.e. to have the property that changing the order of the operands does not change the result. 

  • To journey, to make a journey 

  • To pay, or arrange to pay, in advance, in a lump sum instead of part by part. 

  • To pay out the lumpsum present value of an annuity, instead of paying in instalments; to cash in; to encash 

  • To regularly travel from one place to another using public transport. 

noun
  • A regular journey between two places, typically home and work. 

  • The route, time or distance of that journey. 

swap out

verb
  • To exchange (something or someone) for an unused (or less-used) equivalent. 

  • To exchange (something) for (something else). (usually followed by with or for) 

  • To transfer (memory contents) into a swap file. 

noun
  • Anything that is swapped out for another; an exchange. 

  • A pre-prepared food item used in place of an unfinished food item in order to cut down the overall preparation time during filming. 

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