setup vs windmill

setup

noun
  • Equipment designed for a particular purpose; an apparatus. 

  • A move or set of moves which are meant to draw out a reaction which leaves an exploitable opening in defense. 

  • The fashion in which something is organized or arranged. 

  • A situation orchestrated to frame someone; a covert effort to place the blame on somebody. 

  • An installer. 

  • The process of arranging resources for performing a specific operation, as a run of a particular product. 

  • The tendency of persistent wind to produce higher water levels at the downwind shore of a body of water and lower at the upwind shore. 

windmill

noun
  • The structure containing such machinery. 

  • A pitch where the pitcher swings his arm in a circular motion before throwing the ball. 

  • A child's toy consisting of vanes mounted on a stick that rotate when blown by a person or by the wind. 

  • Any of various muscle exercises in which a large deal of the body makes a great circle, typically one where a kettlebell is raised overhead and the torso is rotated to the other side with the hand reaching its foot (hitting the core, glutes, hamstrings, trapezius, rhomboids, deltoids and rotator cuffs) but sometimes even a windshield wiper. 

  • Any of various large papilionid butterflies of the genus Byasa, the wings of which resemble the vanes of a windmill. 

  • An imaginary enemy, but presented as real. 

  • A guitar move where the strumming hand mimics a turning windmill. 

  • A machine which translates linear motion of wind to rotational motion by means of adjustable vanes called sails. 

  • The false shower. 

  • A breakdancing move in which the dancer rolls his/her torso continuously in a circular path on the floor, across the upper chest, shoulders and back, while twirling the legs in a V shape in the air. 

  • A dunk where the dunker swings his arm in a circular motion before throwing the ball through the hoop. 

verb
  • To rotate with a sweeping motion. 

  • Of a rotating part of a machine, to (become disengaged and) rotate freely. 

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