blow up vs fountain

blow up

verb
  • To inflate or fill with air, either by literally blowing or using an air pump. 

  • To blow something upward. 

  • To succumb to oxygen debt and lose the ability to maintain pace in a race. 

  • To blow the whistle. 

  • To suddenly get very angry. 

  • To fail disastrously. 

  • To explode or be destroyed by explosion. 

  • To become popular very quickly. 

  • To become much more fat or rotund in a short space of time. 

  • To bombard with a large number of calls, texts, etc., often exasperating the recipient. 

  • Receiving a large number of calls or notifications to the point of making the device effectively unusable. 

  • To cause a malodorous smell by flatulation or defecation. 

  • To cause (something or someone) to explode, or to destroy (something) or maim or kill (someone) by means of an explosion. 

  • To enlarge or zoom in. 

fountain

verb
  • To flow or gush as if from a fountain. 

noun
  • An artificial, usually ornamental, water feature (usually in a garden or public place) consisting of one or more streams of water originating from a statue or other structure. 

  • A natural source of water; a spring. 

  • A reservoir from which liquid can be drawn. 

  • A source or origin of a flow (e.g., of favors or knowledge). 

  • A juggling pattern typically done with an even number of props where each prop is caught by the same hand that throws it. 

  • A roundel barry wavy argent and azure. 

  • A ground-based firework that projects sparks similar to a water fountain. 

  • Anything that resembles a fountain in operation. 

  • The structure from which an artificial fountain can issue. 

  • A drink poured from a soda fountain, or the cup it is poured into. 

  • A soda fountain. 

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