circumlocution vs loquacity

circumlocution

noun
  • Unnecessary use of extra words to express an idea, such as a pleonastic phrase (sometimes driven by an attempt at emphatic clarity) or a wordy substitution (the latter driven by euphemistic intent, pedagogic intent, or sometimes loquaciousness alone). 

  • Necessary use of a phrase to circumvent either a vocabulary fault (of speaker or listener) or a lexical gap, either monolingually or in translation. 

  • An instance of such usage; a roundabout expression, whether an inadvisable one or a necessary one. 

loquacity

noun
  • Talkativeness; the quality of being loquacious. 

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