junk vs twelve

junk

noun
  • A collection of miscellaneous items of little value. 

  • A Chinese sailing vessel. 

  • The genitalia, especially of a male. 

  • Discarded or waste material; rubbish, trash, garbage. 

  • Any narcotic drug, especially heroin. 

  • Salt beef. 

  • Pieces of old cable or cordage, used for making gaskets, mats, swabs, etc., and when picked to pieces, forming oakum for filling the seams of ships. 

  • Nonsense; gibberish. 

  • Material or resources of a kind lacking commercial value. 

verb
  • To throw away. 

  • To find something for very little money (meaning derived from the term junkshop) 

twelve

noun
  • A group of twelve items. 

  • A jury (normally composed of twelve persons). 

  • A twelve-bore gun. 

  • The police; law enforcement, especially a narcotics officer. 

  • Front (front side of something, position in front of something). 

num
  • The cardinal number occurring after eleven and before thirteen, represented in Arabic numerals as 12 and in Roman numerals as XII. 

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