axe vs jettison

axe

verb
  • To lay off, terminate or drastically reduce, especially in a rough or ruthless manner; to cancel. 

  • To furnish with an axle. 

  • To fell or chop with an axe. 

noun
  • A position, interest, or reason in buying and selling stock, often with ulterior motives. 

  • An ancient weapon consisting of a head that has one or two blades and a long handle. 

  • A dismissal or rejection. 

  • A tool for felling trees or chopping wood etc. consisting of a heavy head flattened to a blade on one side, and a handle attached to it. 

  • A drastic reduction or cutback. 

  • A gigging musician's particular instrument, especially a guitar in rock music or a saxophone in jazz. 

jettison

verb
  • To let go or get rid of as being useless or defective. 

  • To eject from a boat, submarine, aircraft, spaceship or hot-air balloon, so as to lighten the load. 

noun
  • Items that have been or are about to be ejected from a boat or balloon. 

  • The action of jettisoning items. 

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