take it out of vs whack

take it out of

verb
  • To enervate or make tired; to sap the strength or vitality of. 

  • To exact payment from; to punish. 

whack

verb
  • To surpass; to better. 

  • To kill, bump off. 

  • To beat convincingly; to thrash. 

  • To hit, slap or strike. 

  • To share or parcel out (often with up). 

noun
  • An attempt, a chance, a turn, a go, originally an attempt to beat someone or something. 

  • The sound of a heavy strike. 

  • The strike itself. 

  • The backslash, ⟨ \ ⟩. 

  • The stroke itself, regardless of its successful impact. 

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