vault vs windrow

vault

noun
  • Anything resembling such a downward-facing concave structure, particularly the sky and caves. 

  • A piece of apparatus used for performing jumps. 

  • Any cellar or underground storeroom. 

  • An arched masonry structure supporting and forming a ceiling, whether freestanding or forming part of a larger building. 

  • Any archive of past content. 

  • Any arched ceiling or roof. 

  • The space covered by an arched roof, particularly underground rooms and (Christianity, obsolete) church crypts. 

  • An encrypted digital archive. 

  • The secure room or rooms in or below a bank used to store currency and other valuables; similar rooms in other settings. 

  • An act of vaulting, formerly (chiefly) by deer; a leap or jump. 

  • Any burial chamber, particularly those underground. 

  • An event or performance involving a vaulting horse. 

  • A gymnastic movement performed on this apparatus. 

  • Synonym of volte: a circular movement by the horse. 

verb
  • To jump or leap over. 

  • To build as, or cover with a vault. 

windrow

noun
  • A ridge or berm at a perimeter 

  • The green border of a field, dug up in order to carry the earth onto other land to improve it. 

  • A line of snow left behind by the edge of a snowplow’s blade. 

  • A long snowbank along the side of a road. 

  • A line of leaves etc heaped up by the wind. 

  • A similar streak of seaweed etc on the surface of the sea formed by Langmuir circulation. 

  • A line of gravel left behind by the edge of a grader’s blade. 

  • A row of cut grain or hay allowed to dry in a field. 

verb
  • To arrange (e.g. new-made hay) in lines or windrows. 

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