accept vs relegate

accept

verb
  • To receive or admit to; to agree to; to assent to; to submit to. 

  • To admit to a place or a group. 

  • To acknowledge patiently without opposition or resistance. 

  • To endure patiently. 

  • To regard as proper, usual, true, or to believe in. 

  • To receive, especially with a consent, with favour, or with approval. 

  • To agree to pay. 

  • To receive officially. 

  • To receive as adequate or satisfactory. 

  • To receive something willingly. 

relegate

verb
  • Submit (something) to someone else for appropriate action thereby; compare delegate. 

  • Assign (a thing) to an appropriate place or situation based on appraisal or classification. 

  • Exile or banish to a particular place. 

  • Remove or send to a place far away. 

  • Consign (a person or thing) to a place, position, or role of obscurity, insignificance, oblivion, lower rank or (especially) inferiority. 

  • Refer (a point of contention) to an authority in deference to the judgment thereof. 

  • Transfer (a sports team) to a lower-ranking league division. 

  • Banish from proximity to Rome for a set time; compare relegate. 

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