content vs please

content

verb
  • To give contentment or satisfaction; to satisfy; to make happy. 

adj
  • Satisfied, pleased, contented. 

noun
  • That which contents or satisfies; that which if attained would make one happy. 

  • Satisfaction, contentment; pleasure. 

  • An expression of assent to a bill or motion; an affirmative vote. 

  • That which is contained. 

  • The amount of material contained; contents. 

  • The n-dimensional space contained by an n-dimensional polytope (called volume in the case of a polyhedron and area in the case of a polygon); length, area or volume, generalized to an arbitrary number of dimensions. 

  • The greatest common divisor of the coefficients; (of a polynomial with coefficients in an integral domain) the common factor of the coefficients which, when removed, leaves the adjusted coefficients with no common factor that is noninvertible. 

  • Subject matter; semantic information (or a portion or body thereof); that which is contained in writing, speech, video, etc. 

  • A member who votes in assent. 

please

verb
  • To make happy or satisfy; to give pleasure to. 

  • To desire; to will; to be pleased by. 

adv
  • An expression of annoyance or impatience. 

  • Said as a request to repeat information. 

  • Used to make a polite request. 

  • Used as an affirmative to an offer. 

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