balloon vs caplet

balloon

noun
  • A small container for illicit drugs made from a condom or the finger of a latex glove, etc. 

  • Such an object designed to transport people or equipment through the air. 

  • An inflatable buoyant object, often (but not necessarily) round and flexible. 

  • A bomb or shell. 

  • The outline enclosing words represented as coming from the mouth of a pictured figure. 

  • A round vessel, usually with a short neck, to hold or receive whatever is distilled; a glass vessel of a spherical form. 

  • A type of glass cup, sometimes used for brandy. 

  • A woman's breast. 

  • A speech bubble. 

  • Synonym of balloon payment 

  • Such an object as a child’s toy or party decoration. 

  • A sac inserted into part of the body for therapeutic reasons; such as angioplasty. 

  • A ball or globe on the top of a pillar, church, etc. 

verb
  • Of an aircraft: to plunge alternately up and down. 

  • To go up or voyage in a balloon. 

  • To inflate like a balloon. 

  • To strike (a ball) so that it flies high in the air. 

  • To take up in, or as if in, a balloon. 

  • To increase or expand rapidly. 

caplet

noun
  • A smooth-coated tablet (pill, as in medicine) shaped like a capsule, used as a tamper-resistant alternative to a capsule, or an easy-to-swallow alternative to regular tablets. 

  • A component of an interest rate cap, a derivative instrument that effectively prevents the interest payments on an otherwise variable-rate loan from exceeding an agreed level (the "cap"). Each "caplet", analysable as a call option, covers one interest accrual period (such as three months); the whole interest rate cap is made up of a series of consecutive caplets. 

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