monster vs saint

monster

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

  • A terrifying and dangerous creature. 

  • A bizarre or whimsical creature. 

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

  • Something unusually large. 

  • A badly behaved child, a brat. 

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

verb
  • To harass. 

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

  • To behave as a monster to; to terrorise. 

  • 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. 

saint

noun
  • A person with positive qualities; one who does good. 

  • A person whom a church or another religious group has officially recognised as especially holy or godly; one eminent for piety and virtue. 

  • One of the blessed in heaven. 

verb
  • To canonize, to formally recognize someone as a saint. 

prefix
  • A prefix attached to another term, used to create placenames. The resultant placename need not be associated with any religious saint character. 

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