icon vs straw man

icon

noun
  • A person or thing that is the best example of a certain profession or some doing. 

  • A small picture that represents something. 

  • An image, symbol, picture, or other representation usually as an object of religious devotion. 

  • A type of religious painting portraying a saint or scene from Scripture, often done on wooden panels. 

  • A word, character, or sign whose form reflects and is determined by the referent; onomatopoeic words are necessarily all icons. 

straw man

noun
  • An innocuous person or someone of nominal or lesser importance, as a front man or straw boss. 

  • A doll or scarecrow, particularly one stuffed with straw. 

  • An insubstantial concept, idea, endeavor or argument, particularly one deliberately set up to be weakly supported, e.g. by misrepresenting an opponent's argument by broadening or narrowing the scope of a premise, so that it can be easily knocked down; especially to impugn the strength of any related or contrasted thing or idea. 

  • An outline serving as an initial proposal for a project, usually refined iteratively. 

  • Synonym of straw buyer 

verb
  • To falsely attribute an insubstantial argument (a straw man argument) to another through direct declaration or indirect implication; to put words in someone's mouth. 

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