snark vs spoof

snark

verb
  • To express oneself in a snarky fashion. 

noun
  • The fictional creature of Lewis Carroll's poem, used allusively to refer to fruitless quest or search. 

  • A fluke or unrepeatable result or detection in an experiment. 

  • A graph in which every node has three branches, and the edges cannot be coloured in fewer than four colours without two edges of the same colour meeting at a point. 

  • Snide remarks or attitude. 

spoof

verb
  • To gently satirize. 

  • To falsify. 

  • To ejaculate, to come. 

  • To deceive. 

noun
  • A drinking game in which players hold up to three (or another specified number of) coins hidden in a fist and attempt to guess the total number of coins held. 

  • A light parody. 

  • Nonsense. 

  • An act of deception; a hoax; a joking prank. 

  • Semen. 

adj
  • Fake, hoax. 

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