let go vs transport

let go

verb
  • To emotionally disengage or to distract oneself from a situation. 

  • To dismiss from employment. 

  • To release from one's grasp; to go from a state of holding on to a state of no longer holding on. 

  • To ignore (a comment, etc.). 

  • To fail to maintain a standard of appearance, behavior, or performance. 

  • Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see let, go. 

  • To gain weight 

transport

verb
  • To move (someone) to strong emotion; to carry away. 

  • To carry or bear from one place to another; to remove; to convey. 

  • To deport to a penal colony. 

noun
  • The state of being transported by emotion; rapture. 

  • An act of transporting; conveyance. 

  • A vehicle used to transport (passengers, mail, freight, troops etc.) 

  • A tractor-trailer. 

  • A deported convict. 

  • A device that moves recording tape across the read/write heads of a tape recorder or video recorder etc. 

  • The system of transporting passengers, etc. in a particular region; the vehicles used in such a system. 

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