condemn vs monster

condemn

verb
  • To strongly criticise or denounce; to excoriate the perpetrators of. 

  • To determine and declare (property) to be assigned to public use. See eminent domain. 

  • To adjudge (food or drink) as being unfit for human consumption. 

  • To judicially pronounce (someone) guilty. 

  • To judicially announce a verdict upon a finding of guilt; To sentence 

  • To declare something to be unfit for use, or further use. 

  • To adjudge (building or construction work) as of unsatisfactory quality, requiring the work to be redone. 

  • To declare (a vessel) to be forfeited to the government, to be a prize, or to be unfit for service. 

  • To adjudge (a building) as being unfit for habitation. 

  • To confer eternal divine punishment upon. 

monster

verb
  • To behave as a monster to; to terrorise. 

  • To harass. 

  • To make into a monster; to categorise as a monster; to demonise. 

  • To play (a series of) non-player characters as directed, without having the responsibility of organising the game itself; generally not limited to playing literal monsters or hostile combatants. 

adj
  • Great; very good; excellent. 

  • Very large; worthy of a monster. 

noun
  • A terrifying and dangerous creature. 

  • A bizarre or whimsical creature. 

  • A cruel, heartless, or antisocial person, especially a criminal. 

  • Something unusually large. 

  • A prodigy; someone very talented in a specific domain. 

  • A badly behaved child, a brat. 

  • A non-player character that player(s) fight against in role-playing games. 

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