pimp vs wrangle

pimp

verb
  • To persuade, smooth talk or trick another into doing something for your benefit. 

  • To act as a procurer of prostitutes; to pander. 

  • To excessively customize something, especially a vehicle (also pimp out). 

  • To ask progressively harder and ultimately unanswerable questions of a resident or medical student (said of a senior member of the medical staff). 

  • To promote, to tout. 

  • To prostitute someone. 

adj
  • excellent, fashionable, stylish 

num
  • Five in Cumbrian and Welsh sheep counting. 

noun
  • A man who can easily attract women. 

  • Someone who solicits customers for prostitution and acts as manager for a group of prostitutes; a pander. 

wrangle

verb
  • To convince or influence (someone) by arguing or contending. 

  • To quarrel angrily and noisily; to bicker. 

  • Followed by out of: to elicit (something) from a person by arguing or bargaining. 

  • To gather and organize (data, facts, information, etc.), especially in a way which requires sentience rather than automated methods alone, as in data wrangling. 

  • To argue, to debate; also (dated), to debate or discuss publicly, especially about a thesis at a university. 

  • To make harsh noises as if quarrelling. 

  • To herd (horses or other livestock). 

  • To manage or supervise (people). 

noun
  • Angry disputation; noisy quarrelling. 

  • An angry dispute; a noisy quarrel; an altercation. 

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