conception vs death

conception

noun
  • An image, idea, or notion formed in the mind; a concept, plan or design. 

  • The act of conceiving. 

  • The power or faculty of apprehending of forming an idea in the mind; the power of recalling a past sensation or perception; the ability to form mental abstractions. 

  • The fertilization of an ovum by a sperm to form a zygote. 

  • The state of being conceived; the beginning. 

  • The start of pregnancy. 

  • The formation of a conceptus or an implanted embryo. 

death

noun
  • The cessation of life and all associated processes; the end of an organism's existence as an entity independent from its environment and its return to an inert, nonliving state. 

  • Spiritual lifelessness. 

  • The personification of death as a hooded figure with a scythe; the Grim Reaper. The pronoun he is not the only option, but probably the most traditional one, as it matches with the male grammatical gender of Old English dēaþ, also with cognate German der Tod. The fourth apocalyptic rider (Bible, revelations 6:8) is male θᾰ́νᾰτος (thanatos) in Greek. It has the female name Mors in Latin, but is referred to with male forms qui and eum. The following quotes show this rider on a pale horse is his in the English Bible and she in Peter Gabriel's lyrics. 

  • A cause of great stress, exhaustion, embarrassment, or another negative condition (for someone). 

  • The collapse or end of something. 

  • Execution (in the judicial sense). 

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