prostitute vs vulture

prostitute

noun
  • A person who does, or offers to do, a demeaning or dishonourable activity for money or personal gain; someone who acts in a dishonourable way for personal advantage. 

  • Any person (especially a woman) who has sexual intercourse or engages in other sexual activity for payment, especially as a means of livelihood. 

  • A woman who has sexual intercourse or engages in other sexual activity for payment, especially as a means of livelihood. 

verb
  • To sacrifice (oneself, one's talents etc.) in return for profit or other advantage; to exploit for base purposes. 

  • To offer (oneself or someone else) for sexual activity in exchange for money. 

adj
  • Taking part in promiscuous sexual activity, licentious; (later, chiefly as attributive use of noun) that is a prostitute. 

vulture

noun
  • A person who profits from the suffering of others. 

  • Any of several carrion-eating birds of the families Accipitridae and Cathartidae. 

verb
  • To circle around one's target as if one were a vulture. 

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