dead-end vs founder

dead-end

verb
  • To come to a dead-end. 

noun
  • A road with no exit. 

  • A position that offers no hope of progress. 

adj
  • Going nowhere; blocked. 

founder

verb
  • To fail; to miscarry. 

  • To flood with water and sink. 

  • To disable or lame (a horse) by causing internal inflammation and soreness in the feet or limbs. 

  • To fall; to stumble and go lame, as a horse. 

noun
  • One who founds or establishes (especially said of a company, project, organisation, state). 

  • One who casts metals in various forms; a caster. 

  • The iron worker in charge of the blast furnace and the smelting operation. 

  • A severe laminitis of a horse, caused by untreated internal inflammation in the hooves. 

  • Someone for whose parents one has no data. 

How often have the words dead-end and founder occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )