proposition vs renounce

proposition

verb
  • To make an offer or suggestion to (someone). 

  • To make a suggestion of sexual intercourse to (someone with whom one is not sexually involved). 

noun
  • An assertion so formulated that it can be considered true or false. 

  • A statement of religious doctrine; an article of faith; creed. 

  • In some states, a proposed statute or constitutional amendment to be voted on by the electorate. 

  • The terms of a transaction offered. 

  • An assertion which is provably true, but not important enough to be called a theorem. 

  • The act of offering (an idea) for consideration. 

  • An idea or a plan offered. 

  • A complete sentence. 

  • The part of a poem in which the author states the subject or matter of it. 

  • The content of an assertion that may be taken as being true or false and is considered abstractly without reference to the linguistic sentence that constitutes the assertion; (Aristotelian logic) a predicate of a subject that is denied or affirmed and connected by a copula. 

renounce

verb
  • To make a renunciation of something. 

  • To cast off, repudiate. 

  • To abandon, forsake, discontinue (an action, habit, intention, etc), sometimes by open declaration. 

  • To fail to follow suit; playing a card of a different suit when having no card of the suit led. 

  • To give up, resign, surrender. 

  • To surrender formally some right or trust. 

  • To decline further association with someone or something, disown. 

noun
  • An act of renouncing. 

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