fill in vs mislead

fill in

verb
  • To substitute for somebody or something. 

  • To complete a form or questionnaire with requested information. 

  • To beat up; to physically assault. 

  • To fill; to replace material that is absent or has been removed. 

  • To inform somebody, especially to supply someone missing or missed information. 

mislead

verb
  • To deceptively trick into something wrong. 

  • To lead astray, in a false direction. 

  • To deceive by telling lies or otherwise giving a false impression. 

  • To accidentally or intentionally confuse. 

noun
  • That which is deceptive or untruthful (e.g. a falsehood, deception, untruth, or ruse). 

  • A wrong or bad lead; a leading in the wrong direction. 

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