put out vs upset

put out

verb
  • To cause someone to be out of sorts; to annoy, impose, inconvenience, or disturb. 

  • To cause a player on offense to be out. 

  • To dislocate (a joint). 

  • To knock out: to eliminate from a competition. 

  • To blind (eyes). 

  • To remove from office. 

  • To go out, to head out, especially (sailing) to set sail. 

  • To broadcast, to publish. 

  • To produce, to emit. 

  • To expel. 

  • To place outside, to remove, particularly 

  • To extinguish (fire). 

  • To consent to sex. 

  • Synonym of knock out: to render unconscious. 

  • To turn off (light). 

adj
  • Taking offense; indignant. 

noun
  • The statistic of the number of outs a defensive player directly caused. 

upset

verb
  • To disturb, disrupt or adversely alter (something). 

  • To be upset or knocked over. 

  • To shorten (a tire) in the process of resetting, originally by cutting it and hammering on the ends. 

  • To make (a person) angry, distressed, or unhappy. 

  • To tip or overturn (something). 

  • To defeat unexpectedly. 

  • To thicken and shorten, as a heated piece of iron, by hammering on the end. 

adj
  • Angry, distressed, or unhappy. 

  • Feeling unwell, nauseated, or ready to vomit. 

noun
  • An upper set; a subset (X,≤) of a partially ordered set with the property that, if x is in U and x≤y, then y is in U. 

  • The dangerous situation where the flight attitude or airspeed of an aircraft is outside the designed bounds of operation, possibly resulting in loss of control. 

  • An unexpected victory of a competitor or candidate that was not favored to win. 

  • An overturn. 

  • Disturbance or disruption. 

  • An upset stomach. 

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