double talk vs drivel

double talk

noun
  • Speech which combines English (or some other language) and native-sounding gibberish for humorous effect. 

  • Doublespeak. 

  • Lies, especially in a formal political statement. 

  • A situation when two people talk at the same time, causing overlapping audio signals. 

  • A simple phonetic code with a regular infix that makes meaningful speech sound unintelligible. 

drivel

noun
  • Nonsense; senseless talk. 

verb
  • To use up or to be used up. 

  • To move or travel slowly. 

  • To be weak or foolish; to dote. 

  • To talk nonsense; to talk senselessly; to drool. 

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