batch vs tray

batch

noun
  • A bread roll. 

  • A graduating class; school class. 

  • The quantity of bread or other baked goods baked at one time. 

  • A set of data to be processed at one time. 

  • A bank; a sandbank. 

  • A quantity of anything produced at one operation. 

  • A field or patch of ground lying near a stream; the dale in which a stream flows. 

  • A group or collection of things of the same kind, such as a batch of letters or the next batch of business. 

verb
  • To aggregate things together into a batch. 

  • To live as a bachelor temporarily, of a married man or someone virtually married. 

  • To handle a set of input data or requests as a batch process. 

adj
  • Of a process, operating for a defined set of conditions, and then halting. 

tray

noun
  • The items on a full tray. 

  • A gay trans person, particularly a man (a man who is both transgender and gay) 

  • A type of retail or wholesale packaging for CPUs where the processors are sold in bulk and/or with minimal packaging. 

  • The platform of a truck that supports the load to be hauled. 

  • A notification area used for icons and alerts. 

  • A small, typically rectangular or round, flat, and rigid object upon which things are carried. 

  • A component of a device into which an item is placed for use in the device's operations. 

verb
  • to slide down a snow-covered hill on a tray from a cafeteria. 

  • to place (items) on a tray 

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