meet vs waffle

meet

verb
  • To touch or hit something while moving. 

  • To gather for a formal or social discussion; to hold a meeting. 

  • To converge and finally touch or intersect. 

  • To respond to (an argument etc.) with something equally convincing; to refute. 

  • To be mixed with, to be combined with aspects of. 

  • To satisfy; to comply with. 

  • To come face to face with someone by arrangement. 

  • To get acquainted with someone. 

  • To come face to face with by accident; to encounter. 

  • To play a match. 

  • To balance or come out correct. 

  • To come together in conflict. 

  • To adjoin, be physically touching. 

  • To perceive; to come to a knowledge of; to have personal acquaintance with; to experience; to suffer. 

noun
  • The greatest lower bound, an operation between pairs of elements in a lattice, denoted by the symbol ∧. 

  • A meeting. 

  • A meeting of two trains in opposite directions on a single track, when one is put into a siding to let the other cross. 

  • A gathering of riders, horses and hounds for foxhunting; a field meet for hunting. 

  • A sports competition, especially for track and field or swimming. 

waffle

verb
  • To hold horizontally and rotate (one's hand) back and forth in a gesture of ambivalence or vacillation. 

  • To speak or write evasively or vaguely. 

  • Of an aircraft or motor vehicle: to travel in a slow and unhurried manner. 

  • To be indecisive about something; to dither, to vacillate, to waver. 

  • Of a bird: to move in a side-to-side motion while descending before landing. 

  • To smash (something). 

  • Of a dog: to bark with a high pitch like a puppy, or in muffled manner. 

  • Often followed by on: to speak or write (something) at length without any clear aim or point; to ramble. 

noun
  • In full potato waffle: a savoury flat potato cake with the same kind of grid pattern. 

  • A concrete slab used in flooring with a gridlike structure of ribs running at right angles to each other on its underside. 

  • A flat pastry pressed with a grid pattern, often eaten hot with butter and/or honey or syrup. 

  • (Often lengthy) speech or writing that is evasive or vague, or pretentious. 

  • The high-pitched sound made by a young dog; also, a muffled bark. 

  • A type of fabric woven with a honeycomb texture. 

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