diner vs takeout

diner

noun
  • A typically small restaurant, usually modeled after a railroad dining car, that serves lower-class fare, normally having a counter with stools along one side and booths on the other, and often decorated in 50s and 60s pop culture themes and playing popular music from those decades. 

  • One who dines. 

  • A dining car in a railroad train. 

takeout

noun
  • Food purchased from a takeaway. 

  • A double of an opponent's bid, intended to invite one's partner to compete in the auction, rather than to penalise one's opponents. 

  • A detailed news segment. 

  • A stone that hits another stone, removing it from play. 

adj
  • (Of food) intended to be eaten off the premises from which it was bought. 

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