armchair vs sprawl

armchair

noun
  • A chair with supports for the arms or elbows. 

  • Hypernyms: chair, furniture 

adj
  • Remote from actual involvement, including a person retired from previously active involvement. 

  • Unqualified or uninformed but yet giving advice, especially on technical issues, such as law, architecture, medicine, military theory, or sports; relating to such advice. 

verb
  • To create based on theory or general knowledge rather than data. 

  • To theorize based on analysis of data that was gathered previously; to reflect. 

sprawl

noun
  • An ungainly sprawling posture. 

  • A defensive technique that is done in response to certain takedown attempts, where one scoots the legs backwards so as to land on the upper back of the opponent. 

  • A straggling, haphazard growth, especially of housing on the edge of a city. 

verb
  • To spread out in a disorderly fashion; to straggle. 

  • To scoot the legs backwards, so as to land on the upper back of an opponent attempting a takedown. 

  • To sit with the limbs spread out. 

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