bungle vs spoil

bungle

verb
  • To incompetently perform (a task); to ruin (something) through incompetent action; to botch up, to bumble. 

  • To act or work incompetently; to fumble. 

noun
  • A botched or incompetently handled action or situation; a blunder. 

spoil

verb
  • To ruin the character of, by overindulgence; to coddle or pamper to excess. 

  • To reveal the ending or major events of (a story etc.); to ruin (a surprise) by exposing it ahead of time. 

  • To render (a ballot paper) invalid by deliberately defacing it. 

  • Of food, to become bad, sour or rancid; to decay. 

  • To ruin; to damage (something) in some way making it unfit for use. 

  • To reduce the lift generated by an airplane or wing by deflecting air upwards, usually with a spoiler. 

noun
  • Material (such as rock or earth) removed in the course of an excavation, or in mining or dredging. Tailings. Such material could be utilised somewhere else. 

  • Plunder taken from an enemy or victim. 

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