get about vs run with

get about

verb
  • To be mobile, physically active. 

  • To become widely known; to be leaked to the public or a wider audience. 

  • To visit a variety of different places. 

run with

verb
  • Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see run, with. 

  • To be a member of (a gang, hooligan firm, etc.); to associate with a, typically disreputable, individual or group. 

  • To take an incomplete or inadequate (plan, text, etc.) and develop it further, often with the implication of carelessness. 

  • To follow something through to completion or realization. 

  • To be streaming with a fluid. 

How often have the words get about and run with occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )