squab vs squeaker

squab

noun
  • A baby pigeon, dove, or chicken. 

  • A baby rook. 

  • The meat of such a baby bird used as food. 

  • A thick cushion, especially a flat one covering the seat of a chair or sofa. 

  • A person of a short, fat figure. 

verb
  • To stuff thickly and sew through, the stitches being concealed by buttons, etc. 

  • To furnish with squabs, or cushions. 

adj
  • Unfledged; unfeathered. 

  • Curt; abrupt. 

  • Fat; thick; plump; bulky. 

  • Shy; coy. 

  • Clumsy. 

adv
  • With a heavy fall; plump. 

squeaker

noun
  • A young bird; a cheeper. 

  • A party toy that uncoils with a squeaking sound when blown; a party puffer. 

  • An Australian grey crow-shrike or grey currawong (Strepera versicolor plumbea). 

  • A piglet of the wild boar. 

  • An informer. 

  • Any of family Arthroleptidae, of frogs. 

  • Any of genus Synodontis, of catfish. 

  • An act of flatulence; a fart. 

  • One who or that which squeaks. 

  • A game or election won by a narrow margin. 

  • A young user on a voice chat system who has a high-pitched voice. 

  • A squab or young domestic pigeon still in the nest. 

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