dribble vs gibberish

dribble

noun
  • Drool; saliva. 

  • A weak, unsteady stream; a trickle. 

  • A small amount of a liquid. 

  • The act of moving (with) a ball by kicking or bouncing it. 

  • A card flourish in which the cards fall smoothly from one's hand. 

verb
  • To let something fall in drips. 

  • To perform a card flourish in which the cards fall smoothly from one's hand. 

  • In various ball games, to move (with) the ball, controlling its path by kicking or bouncing it repeatedly. 

  • To let saliva drip from the mouth; to drool. 

  • To fall in drops or an unsteady stream; to trickle. 

gibberish

noun
  • A language game, comparable to pig Latin, in which one inserts a nonsense syllable before the first vowel in each syllable of a word. 

  • Needlessly obscure or overly technical language. 

  • Speech or writing that is unintelligible, incoherent or meaningless. 

adj
  • unintelligible, incoherent or meaningless 

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