whelp vs wipe out

whelp

verb
  • To give birth. 

noun
  • One of several wooden strips to prevent wear on a windlass on a clipper-era ship. 

  • An insolent youth; a mere child. 

  • A young offspring of a canid (ursid, felid, pinniped), especially of a dog or a wolf, the young of a bear or similar mammal (lion, tiger, seal); a pup, wolf cub. 

  • A tooth on a sprocket wheel (compare sprocket and cog). 

wipe out

verb
  • To crash; to fall over (especially in board sports such as surfing, skateboarding, etc.). 

  • To physically erase (writing, computer data, etc.). 

  • To do away with; to cause to disappear. 

  • To destroy (especially, a large number of people or things); to obliterate. 

  • To knock (a surfer) off their board. 

  • To fall off one's surfboard. 

  • To exhaust; to tire out. 

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