polyglot vs terp

polyglot

noun
  • One who has mastered (especially when able to speak) several languages. 

  • A publication in several languages; specifically, a book (especially a bible) containing several versions of the same subject matter or text in several languages. 

  • A mixture of languages or nomenclatures. 

  • A file that can be interpreted validly as multiple formats. 

  • A program written to be valid in multiple programming languages. 

adj
  • Of a person: speaking, or versed in, many languages; multilingual. 

  • Containing, or made up of, several languages; specifically, of a book (especially a bible): having text translated into several languages. 

  • Comprising various (native) linguistic groups; multilingual. 

terp

noun
  • An interpreter (person who translates). 

  • An interpreter (program that parses and executes another program). 

  • An artificial dwelling mound found on the North European Plain, created to provide safe ground during storm surges, high tides and sea or river flooding. 

  • Any of various essential oils containing monoterpene alcohols which are added to a henna mix to darken the color. 

verb
  • To add such an essential oil to (a henna mix). 

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