return vs throwback

return

noun
  • An answer. 

  • The act of relinquishing control to the calling procedure. 

  • A return value: the data passed back from a called procedure. 

  • A return pipe, returning fluid to a boiler or other central plant (compare with flow pipe, which carries liquid away from a central plant). 

  • The act of catching a ball after a punt and running it back towards the opposing team. 

  • A return ticket. 

  • An item that is returned, e.g. due to a defect, or the act of returning it. 

  • An account, or formal report, of an action performed, of a duty discharged, of facts or statistics, etc.; especially, in the plural, a set of tabulated statistics prepared for general information. 

  • The continuation in a different direction, most often at a right angle, of a building, face of a building, or any member, such as a moulding; applied to the shorter in contradistinction to the longer. 

  • Gain or loss from an investment. 

  • A report of income submitted to a government for purposes of specifying exact tax payment amounts; a tax return. 

  • A throw from a fielder to the wicket-keeper or to another fielder at the wicket. 

  • A carriage return character. 

  • The act of returning. 

  • A short perpendicular extension of a desk, usually slightly lower. 

verb
  • To elect according to the official report of the election officers. 

  • To recur; to come again. 

  • To throw a ball back to the wicket-keeper (or a fielder at that position) from somewhere in the field. 

  • To come or go back (to a place or person). 

  • To give in requital or recompense; to requite. 

  • To give something back to its original holder or owner. 

  • To report, or bring back and make known. 

  • To go back in thought, narration, or argument. 

  • To place or put back something where it had been. 

  • To bat the ball back over the net in response to a serve. 

  • To play a card as a result of another player's lead. 

  • To pass (data) back to the calling procedure. 

  • To say in reply; to respond. 

  • To take back something to a vendor for a complete or partial refund. 

  • To relinquish control to the calling procedure. 

throwback

noun
  • An atavism. 

  • A reversion to an earlier stage of development. 

  • An organism that has characteristics of a more primitive form. 

  • Coordinate terms: nowhere income, throwout 

  • A person considered to be primitive, uncivilized and mentally deficient. 

  • A person or thing that evokes memories. 

  • A practice to avoid untaxed nowhere income by instead taxing such income in the originating state for a given transaction. 

  • A person similar to an ancestor, or something new similar to what already existed. 

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