party vs turner

party

noun
  • A small group of birds or mammals. 

  • A group of people traveling or attending an event together, or participating in the same activity. 

  • A group of persons collected or gathered together for some particular purpose. 

  • A political group considered as a formal whole, united under one specific political platform of issues and campaigning to take part in government. 

  • With to: an accessory, someone who takes part. 

  • A person or group of people constituting a particular side in a contract or legal action. 

  • A discrete detachment of troops, especially for a particular purpose. 

  • A gathering of acquaintances so that one of them may offer items for sale to the rest of them. 

  • A gathering of usually invited guests for entertainment, fun and socializing. 

adj
  • Of a fence or wall: shared by two properties and serving to divide them. 

  • Parted or divided, as in the direction or form of one of the ordinaries. 

verb
  • To form a party (with). 

  • To celebrate at a party, to have fun, to enjoy oneself. 

  • To take recreational drugs. 

  • To engage in flings, to have one-night stands, to sow one's wild oats. 

turner

noun
  • A variety of pigeon; a tumbler. 

  • A kitchen utensil used for turning food. 

  • An acrobat or gymnast, especially (historical) a member of the German Turnvereine, German-American gymnastic clubs that also served as nationalist political groups. 

  • A very dry pitch on which the ball will turn with ease. 

  • One who or that which turns. 

  • A person who practices athletic or gymnastic exercises. 

  • An old Scottish copper coin worth two pence, issued by King James VI. 

  • A person who turns and shapes wood etc. on a lathe 

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