get around vs make the rounds

get around

verb
  • To transport oneself from place to place. 

  • To circumvent the obligation and performance of a chore; to get out of. 

  • To avoid or bypass an obstacle. 

  • To visit numerous different places. 

  • To be sexually promiscuous. 

  • To move to the other side of (something, such as an obstruction) by deviating from a direct course or following a curved path. 

  • Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see get, around. 

make the rounds

verb
  • To circulate from one place to another. 

  • To go from one place to another for a particular reason. 

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