stand vs twist

stand

verb
  • To support oneself on the feet in an erect position. 

  • To have or maintain a position, order, or rank; to be in a particular relation. 

  • To be valid. 

  • Of a ship or its captain, to steer, sail (in a specified direction, for a specified destination etc.). 

  • To be placed in an upright or vertical orientation. 

  • To be consistent; to agree; to accord. 

  • To remain without ruin or injury. 

  • To place in an upright or standing position. 

  • To maintain one's ground; to be acquitted; not to fail or yield; to be safe. 

  • To appear in court. 

  • To stop asking for more cards; to keep one's hand as it has been dealt so far. 

  • To be positioned to gain or lose. 

  • To undergo; withstand; hold up. 

  • To remain motionless. 

  • To be present, to have welled up. 

  • To occupy or hold a place; to be set, placed, fixed, located, or situated. 

  • To measure when erect on the feet. 

  • To be a candidate (in an election). 

  • To act as an umpire. 

  • To oppose, usually as a team, in competition. 

  • To tolerate. 

  • To cover the expense of; to pay for. 

  • To maintain an invincible or permanent attitude; to be fixed, steady, or firm; to take a position in resistance or opposition. 

  • To rise to one’s feet; to stand up. 

noun
  • A designated spot where someone or something may stand or wait. 

  • A particular grove or other group of trees or shrubs. 

  • A single set, as of arms. 

  • The act of standing. 

  • A contiguous group of trees sufficiently uniform in age-class distribution, composition, and structure, and growing on a site of sufficiently uniform quality, to be a distinguishable unit. 

  • A small building, booth, or stage, as in a bandstand or hamburger stand. 

  • An advertisement filling an entire billboard, comprising many sheets of paper. 

  • A partnership. 

  • A defensive position or effort. 

  • A young tree, usually reserved when other trees are cut; also, a tree growing or standing upon its own root, in distinction from one produced from a scion set in a stock, either of the same or another kind of tree. 

  • The platform on which a witness testifies in court; the witness stand or witness box. 

  • An area of raised seating for waiters at the stock exchange. 

  • A device to hold something upright or aloft. 

  • A period of performance in a given location or venue. 

  • A standstill, a motionless state, as of someone confused, or a hunting dog who has found game. 

  • Grandstand. (often in the plural) 

  • A type of supernatural ability from the anime and manga series JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, named for the fact that they appear to 'stand' next to their user. 

  • A location or position where one may stand. 

  • A resolute, unwavering position; firm opinion; action for a purpose in the face of opposition. 

twist

verb
  • To injure (a body part) by bending it in the wrong direction. 

  • To turn the ends of something, usually thread, rope etc., in opposite directions, often using force. 

  • To wreathe; to wind; to encircle; to unite by intertexture of parts. 

  • To distort or change the truth or meaning of words when repeating. 

  • In the game of blackjack (pontoon or twenty-one), to be dealt another card. 

  • To turn a knob etc. 

  • To join together by twining one part around another. 

  • To wind into; to insinuate. 

  • To form a twist (in any of the above noun meanings). 

  • To wind; to follow a bendy or wavy course; to have many bends. 

  • To cause to rotate. 

  • To contort; to writhe; to complicate; to crook spirally; to convolve. 

  • To coax. 

  • To dance the twist (a type of dance characterised by twisting one's hips). 

noun
  • A sliver of lemon peel added to a cocktail, etc. 

  • A distortion to the meaning of a word or passage. 

  • A sudden bend (or short series of bends) in a road, path, etc. 

  • A twisting force. 

  • The form given in twisting. 

  • An unexpected turn in a story, tale, etc. 

  • A roll or baton of baked dough or pastry in a twisted shape. 

  • The spiral course of the rifling of a gun barrel or a cannon. 

  • A type of dance characterised by rotating one’s hips. See Twist (dance) on Wikipedia for more details. 

  • A strong individual tendency or bent; inclination. 

  • The degree of stress or strain when twisted. 

  • Anything twisted, or the act of twisting. 

  • A small roll of tobacco. 

  • A sprain, especially to the ankle. 

  • A girl, a woman. 

  • A material for gun barrels, consisting of iron and steel twisted and welded together. 

  • A type of thread made from two filaments twisted together. 

  • A rotation of the body when diving. 

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