support vs turn in

support

verb
  • To serve, as in a customer-oriented mindset; to give support to. 

  • To keep from falling. 

  • To be designed (said of machinery, electronics, or computers, or their parts, accessories, peripherals, or programming) to function compatibly with or provide the capacity for. 

  • To help, particularly financially. 

  • To back a cause, party, etc., mentally or with concrete aid. 

  • To verify; to make good; to substantiate; to establish; to sustain. 

  • To answer questions and resolve problems regarding something sold. 

  • To be accountable for, or involved with, but not responsible for. 

  • To assume and carry successfully, as the part of an actor; to represent or act; to sustain. 

noun
  • An actor playing a subordinate part with a star. 

  • Answers to questions and resolution of problems regarding something sold. 

  • Evidence. 

  • Something which supports. 

  • An accompaniment in music. 

  • Compatibility and functionality for a given product or feature. 

  • Horizontal, vertical or rotational support of structures: movable, hinged, fixed. 

  • Financial or other help. 

  • A set whose elements are at least partially included in a given fuzzy set (i.e., whose grade of membership in that fuzzy set is strictly greater than zero). 

  • in relation to a function, the set of points where the function is not zero, or the closure of that set. 

turn in

verb
  • To submit something; to give. 

  • To convert a goal using a turning motion of the body. 

  • To relinquish; give up; to tell on someone to the authorities (especially to turn someone in). 

  • To go to bed; to retire to bed. 

  • To reverse the ends of threads and insert them back into the piece being woven so they do not protrude and eventually unravel. 

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