dismissal vs induction

dismissal

noun
  • A written or spoken statement of such an act. 

  • Removal from consideration; putting something out of one's mind, mentally disregarding something or someone. 

  • The rejection of a legal proceeding, or a claim or charge made therein. 

  • The act of sending someone away. 

  • Release from confinement; liberation. 

  • Deprivation of office; the fact or process of being fired from employment or stripped of rank. 

  • The final blessing said by a priest or minister at the end of a religious service. 

  • The event of a batsman getting out; a wicket. 

induction

noun
  • An act of inducing. 

  • Derivation of general principles from specific instances. 

  • A method of proof of a theorem by first proving it for a specific case (often an integer; usually 0 or 1) and showing that, if it is true for one case then it must be true for the next. 

  • An act of inducting. 

  • The process of inducing the birth process. 

  • The delivery of air to the cylinders of an internal combustion piston engine. 

  • Generation of an electric current by a varying magnetic field. 

  • A formal ceremony in which a person is appointed to an office or into military service. 

  • The process of showing a newcomer around a place where they will work or study. 

  • Use of rumors to twist and complicate the plot of a play or to narrate in a way that does not have to state truth nor fact within the play. 

  • Given a group of cells that emits or displays a substance, the influence of this substance on the fate of a second group of cells 

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