musical vs vocative

musical

adj
  • Of, belonging or relating to music, or to its performance or notation. 

  • Pleasing to the ear; sounding agreeably; having the qualities of music; melodious; harmonious. 

  • Fond of music; discriminating with regard to music; gifted or skilled in music. 

  • Pertaining to a class of games in which players move while music plays, but have to take a fixed position when it stops; by extension, any situation where people repeatedly change positions. 

noun
  • A meeting or a party for a musical entertainment; a musicale. 

  • A stage performance, show or film that involves singing, dancing and musical numbers performed by the cast as well as acting. 

vocative

adj
  • Of or pertaining to calling; used in calling or vocation. 

  • Used in address; appellative (said of that case or form of the noun, pronoun, or adjective, in which a person or thing is addressed). For example "Domine, O Lord" 

noun
  • The vocative case 

  • A word in the vocative case 

  • Something said to (or as though to) a particular person or thing; an entreaty, an invocation. 

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