bombast vs grabble

bombast

verb
  • To use high-sounding words; to speak or write in a pompous or ostentatious manner. 

  • To swell or fill out; to inflate, to pad. 

adj
  • Big without meaning, or high-sounding; bombastic, inflated; magniloquent. 

noun
  • High-sounding words; language above the dignity of the occasion; a pompous or ostentatious manner of writing or speaking. 

grabble

verb
  • To utter inarticulate sounds, often quickly and loudly; to say (something) quickly, idly or foolishly. 

  • To attempt to grab; to grasp at (something). 

  • To catch fish by reaching into the water with one's hand. 

  • To pull, lift or dig (something) (out of the ground) by searching with one's hands and fingers. 

  • To search with one's hands and fingers; to attempt to grasp something. 

  • To touch (someone) with one's hands or fingers, sometimes in a sexual way. 

  • To pick (something or someone) up hastily, roughly or clumsily. 

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