.set('corpus','15');// Englishparams.set('smoothing','0');constresponse=awaitfetch('https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?'+params.toString());constresponseText=awaitresponse.text();constmatch=regexp.exec(responseText);constjson=match[1];returnJSON.parse(json);}module.exports={fetchNgram...
Google's Ngram Viewer is anonlinetool to learn about words. It looks at the words from Google books to show how often people use words over time and in what places. We used the Google Ngram Viewer to compare British and American usage of the three words. The first ngram looked at Br...
Google’s Ngram Vieweris a great tool to use for identifying the usage trends of "indices" vs. "indexes" in publications since the 1800s. The history of the usage of the word usually favors "indices" but as adoption of the Americanized plural of words increased, the word "indexes" began...
A search of the Google Ngram Viewer shows that the term “fax” heavily entered the popular language in the 1980s.Google’s Ngram viewer shows some mentions of “fax” as early as the 1600s. Every one of the mentions before the early 1900s that we’ve looked through attribute to:...
In addition, the potential of the Google Ngram Viewer (http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/) may be explored by teacher and students alike, in determining trends in written English. 展开 年份: 2012 收藏 引用 批量引用 报错 分享 全部来源 免费下载 求助全文 Semantic Scholar ResearchGate ResearchGate (...
According to theGoogle Ngram Viewer, “useful to” has always been used more frequently than “useful for”, and this remains the case today. However, in recent times, the gap between the two has greatly reduced. It’s therefore clear to us that either phrase is suitable. There are no ...
UsingGoogle’s Ngram Viewer, we see an uptick in the phrase’s use in 1980 before a significant jump in 2000. Swing state was a more popular term for closely contested states in presidential politics starting in the 1960s. By 2004, battleground state overtook swing state in popularity but ...
I've used the phrase "runs like a dog" to mean that my car is on its last legs and can't, sometimes, run anywhere near as fast as a dog can. Can anyone shed light on where this meaning of the phrase came from? The Google NGram viewer says that "work like a dog" is much mo...
The mouth is not typically referred to as a 'boy howdy,' though it, too, fits this description. Which throws me a curve. I've never heard such a term for that particular portion of anatomy until now. So I'd appreciate something a bit more authoritative about thi...
Which Is Used the Most? In life, do you think people would “Switch” or “Swap” more often? And how does that reflect in how those words are used? We’ll take a look at a graph fromGoogle Ngram Viewerto find out. “Switch” seems to be used much more frequently than “Swap”...