embark vs entrain

embark

verb
  • To engage, enlist, or invest (as persons, money, etc.) in any affair. 

  • To start, begin. 

  • To cause to go on board a vessel or boat; to put on shipboard. 

  • To get on a boat or ship or (outside the USA) an aeroplane. 

entrain

verb
  • To encarriage, to conjoin, to link; as in a series of entities, elements, objects or processes. 

  • To suspend small particles in the current of a fluid. 

  • To get into or board a railway train. 

  • To put aboard a railway train. 

  • To become trained or conditioned in a pattern of brain behavior. 

  • To draw along as a current does. 

  • To set up or propagate a signal, such as an oscillation. 

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