crash vs train wreck

crash

verb
  • To cause to terminate extraordinarily. 

  • To hit or strike with force 

  • To make or experience informal temporary living arrangements, especially overnight. 

  • To lie down for a long rest, sleep or nap, as from tiredness or exhaustion. 

  • To give, as a favor. 

  • To accelerate a project or a task or its schedule by devoting more resources to it. 

  • To collide with something destructively, fall or come down violently. 

  • To terminate extraordinarily. 

  • To experience a period of depression and/or lethargy after a period of euphoria, as after the euphoric effect of a psychotropic drug has dissipated. 

  • To make a sudden loud noise. 

  • To severely damage or destroy something by causing it to collide with something else. 

  • To take a sudden and severe turn for the worse; to rapidly deteriorate. 

noun
  • A type of rough linen. 

  • A sudden, intense, loud sound, as made for example by cymbals. 

  • A group of rhinoceroses. 

  • An automobile, airplane, or other vehicle accident. 

  • A sudden large decline of business or the prices of stocks (especially one that causes additional failures). 

  • A sudden decline in any living form's population levels, often leading to extinction. 

  • A malfunction of computer software or hardware which causes it to shut down or become partially or totally inoperable. 

  • A comedown from a drug. 

adj
  • Quick, fast, intensive, impromptu. 

train wreck

verb
  • To ruin utterly and catastrophically, to cause to end in disaster. 

noun
  • The aftermath of a train crash. 

  • A disaster, especially one which is large in scale and readily seen by public observers. 

  • Someone (especially a woman) who is unbalanced and considered a mess, a disaster, one who is suffering personal ruin. 

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