boast vs own

boast

verb
  • To brag; to talk loudly in praise of oneself. 

  • To speak of with pride, vanity, or exultation, with a view to self-commendation; to extol. 

  • To play a boast shot. 

  • To dress, as a stone, with a broad chisel. 

  • To possess something special (e.g. as a feature). 

  • To shape roughly as a preparation for the finer work to follow; to cut to the general form required. 

noun
  • A shot where the ball is driven off a side wall and then strikes the front wall. 

  • A brag; ostentatious positive appraisal of oneself. 

  • Something that one brags about. 

own

verb
  • To proudly acknowledge; to not be ashamed or embarrassed of. 

  • To confess. 

  • To take responsibility for. 

  • To be very good. 

  • To virtually or figuratively enslave. 

  • To admit, concede, grant, allow, acknowledge, confess; not to deny. 

  • To defeat or embarrass; to overwhelm. 

  • To illicitly obtain superuser or root access to a computer system, thereby having access to all of the user files on that system; pwn. 

  • To defeat, dominate, or be above, also spelled pwn. 

  • To have recognized political sovereignty over a place, territory, as distinct from the ordinary connotation of property ownership. 

  • To admit; concede; acknowledge. 

  • To claim as one's own. 

  • To have rightful possession of (property, goods or capital); to have legal title to; to acquire a property or asset. 

  • To recognise; acknowledge. 

adj
  • Not shared. 

  • Belonging to; possessed; acquired; proper to; property of; titled to; held in one's name; under/using the name of. Often marks a possessive determiner as reflexive, referring back to the subject of the clause or sentence. 

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