broad vs meager

broad

adj
  • Plain; evident. 

  • General rather than specific. 

  • Extended, in the sense of diffused; open; clear; full. 

  • Comprehensive; liberal; enlarged. 

  • Having a large measure of any thing or quality; unlimited; unrestrained. 

  • Unsubtle; obvious. 

  • Free; unrestrained; unconfined. 

  • Strongly regional. 

  • Wide in extent or scope. 

  • Velarized, i.e. not palatalized. 

noun
  • A British gold coin worth 20 shillings, issued by the Commonwealth of England in 1656. 

  • A shallow lake, one of a number of bodies of water in eastern Norfolk and Suffolk. 

  • A lathe tool for turning down the insides and bottoms of cylinders. 

  • A kind of floodlight. 

meager

adj
  • Dry and harsh to the touch (e.g., as chalk). 

  • Poor, deficient or inferior in amount, quality or extent 

  • Of a set: such that, considered as a subset of a (usually larger) topological space, it is in a precise sense small or negligible. 

  • Having little flesh; lean; thin. 

verb
  • To make lean. 

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