convert vs rescript

convert

verb
  • To change (something) from one use, function, or purpose to another. 

  • To express (a quantity) in alternative units. 

  • To score extra points after (a try) by completing a conversion. 

  • To appropriate wrongfully or unlawfully; to commit the common law tort of conversion. 

  • To induce (someone) to adopt a particular religion, faith, ideology or belief (see also sense 11). 

  • To score a spare. 

  • To perform the action that an online advertisement is intended to induce; to reach the point of conversion. 

  • To undergo a conversion of religion, faith or belief (see also sense 3). 

  • To transform a material or positional advantage into a win. 

  • To become converted. 

  • To score (especially a penalty kick). 

  • To change (one proposition) into another, so that what was the subject of the first becomes the predicate of the second. 

  • To express (a unit of measurement) in terms of another; to furnish a mathematical formula by which a quantity, expressed in the former unit, may be given in the latter. 

  • To increase one's individual score, especially from 50 runs (a fifty) to 100 runs (a century), or from a century to a double or triple century. 

  • To transform or change (something) into another form, substance, state, or product. 

  • To exchange for something of equal value. 

noun
  • The equivalent of a conversion in rugby 

  • A person who has converted to a religion. 

  • A person who is now in favour of something that he or she previously opposed or disliked. 

rescript

verb
  • To script again or anew. 

noun
  • A rewriting, a document copied or written again. 

  • A duplicate copy of a legal document. 

  • A clarification of a point of law by a monarch issued upon formal consultation by a lower magistrate. 

  • An ad hoc reply of a pope to some specific question of canon law or morality, without precedential force, sometimes (improper) inclusive of decretals which serve as precedents in canon law. 

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