dissent vs roll over

dissent

noun
  • An act of disagreeing with, or deviating from, the views and opinions of those holding authority. 

  • Disagreement with the ideas, doctrines, decrees, etc. of a political party, government or religion. 

  • A violation that arises when disagreement with an official call is expressed in an inappropriate manner such as foul language, rude gestures, or failure to comply. 

  • A separate opinion filed in a case by judges who disagree with the outcome of the majority of the court in that case 

verb
  • To disagree; to withhold assent. Construed with from (or, formerly, to). 

  • To differ from, especially in opinion, beliefs, etc. 

roll over

verb
  • To give in to. 

  • To increment, especially back to an initial value. 

  • To make a rolling motion or turn. 

  • To reinvest funds from a lottery into a subsequent one, because nobody won it. 

  • To reinvest funds from a maturing financial security in the same or similar investment. 

  • To easily overwhelm; to steamroller; to brush aside. 

  • To move the cursor over. 

  • To cause a rolling motion or turn. 

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