kick around vs moot

kick around

verb
  • To be discussed informally; to be considered. 

  • To wander loose; to float around; to hang around. 

  • To abuse or mistreat; to bully; to be rough with. 

noun
  • An informal game of football, rugby or similar sports. 

moot

verb
  • To discuss or debate. 

  • To argue or plead in a supposed case. 

  • To say, utter, also insinuate. 

  • To take root and begin to grow. 

  • To make or declare irrelevant. 

  • To turn up soil or dig up roots, especially an animal with a snout. 

  • To bring up as a subject for debate, to propose. 

adj
  • Being an exercise of thought; academic. 

  • Having no practical consequence or relevance. 

  • Subject to discussion (originally at a moot); arguable, debatable, unsolved or impossible to solve. 

noun
  • A social gathering of pagans, normally held in a public house. 

  • A whisper, or an insinuation, also gossip or rumors. 

  • A mutual follower on a social media platform. 

  • Vagina. 

  • A moot court. 

  • A ring for gauging wooden pins. 

  • The stump of a tree; the roots and bottom end of a felled tree. 

  • An assembly (usually for decision-making in a locality). 

  • A gathering of Rovers, usually in the form of a camp lasting 2 weeks. 

  • A system of arbitration in many areas of Africa in which the primary goal is to settle a dispute and reintegrate adversaries into society rather than assess penalties. 

  • Talk. 

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