take out vs work in

take out

verb
  • To win a sporting event, competition, premiership, etc. 

  • To escort someone on a date. 

  • To immobilize with force; to subdue; to incapacitate. 

  • To obtain by application by a legal or other official process. 

  • To remove. 

  • To kill or destroy. 

work in

verb
  • To find time or space for, amid other things. 

  • Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see work, in. 

  • To work out using a machine in between the sets of someone who is already using that machine. 

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