| make up | make up something artificial or untrue | en |
| make up | do or give something to somebody in return; "Does she pay you for the work you are doing?" | en |
| make up | make up work that was missed due to absence at a later point; "I have to make up a French exam"; "Can I catch up with the material or is it too late?" | en |
| make up | come to terms; "After some discussion we finally made up" | en |
| make up | devise or compose; "This designer makes up our Spring collections"; "He designed women's shoes" | en |
| make up | cosmetics; figure, body structure, build; arrangement isim | en |
| make up | make up work that was missed due to absence at a later point; "I have to make up a French exam"; "Can I catch up with the material or is it too late? | en |
| make up | form or compose; "This money is my only income"; "The stone wall was the backdrop for the performance"; "These constitute my entire belonging"; "The children made up the chorus"; "This sum represents my entire income for a year"; "These few men comprise his entire army" | en |
| make up | apply make-up or cosmetics to one's face to appear prettier; "She makes herself up every morning" | en |
| make up | put in order or neaten; "make the bed"; "make up a room" | en |
| make up | If you make yourself up or if someone else makes you up, make-up such as powder or lipstick is put on your face. She spent too much time making herself up She chose Maggie to make her up for her engagement photographs I can't be bothered to make up my face | en |
| make up | If you make up something such as a story or excuse, you invent it, sometimes in order to deceive people. I think it's very unkind of you to make up stories about him I'm not making it up. The character exists in real life | en |
| make up | The people or things that make up something are the members or parts that form that thing. North Africans make up the largest and poorest immigrant group in the country Insects are made up of tens of thousands of proteins. = form, constitute | en |
| make up | If you make up an amount, you add something to it so that it is as large as it should be. Less than half of the money that students receive is in the form of grants, and loans have made up the difference The team had six professionals and made the number up with five amateurs For every £100 you invest into a pension plan the Inland Revenue makes it up to £125 | en |
| make up | If you make up time or hours, you work some extra hours because you have previously taken some time off work. They'll have to make up time lost during the strike | en |
| make up | If you make up something such as food or medicine, you prepare it by mixing or putting different things together. Prepare the souffle dish before making up the souffle mixture | en |
| make up | If two people make up or make it up after a quarrel or disagreement, they become friends again. She came back and they made up They never made up the quarrel They should make up with their ex-enemy in the West I'll make it up with him again | en |
| make up | construct; constitute; invent, concoct; forgive and forget; supply what is lacking; put on cosmetics; compensate for something missed (as in: "I missed the test, may I make it up?") fiil | en |
| make up | If you make up a bed, you put sheets and blankets on it so that someone can sleep there. Her mother made up a bed in her old room | en |
| Makeup | face | en |
| make up for | To make up for a bad experience or the loss of something means to make the situation better or make the person involved happier. Ask for an extra compensation payment to make up for the stress you have been caused = compensate for | en |
| make up for | compensate for; complete, supply what is lacking | en |
| make up to | compensate, correct a wrongdoing | en |
| make up to | If you say that you will make it up to someone, you are promising that you will do something good for them after they have been upset or disappointed, especially by you. I'll make it up to you, I promise I must make it up to him for the awful intrusion of last night | en |
| make-up | Attendance at the meeting of another Rotary club or certain other functions as provided in article VIII of the standard Rotary club constitution, to protect membership and receive attendance credit when a meeting of the Rotarian's own club is missed When attendance is made up at another Rotary club, it is reported to the Rotarian's home club on a "Visiting Rotarian Report Card" sent by the secretary of the club visited | en |
| make-up | The arrangement of printed material on a page, or in an issue | en |
| make-up | The assembly of type and plates into pages | en |
| make-up | No, we're not talking about what women wear on their faces Make-up consists of the top 3 or 4 courses (horizontal stitches) of a sock Lycra® spandex or rubber yarn is sometimes used in the make-up of socks to help keep them stay up on your legs or ankles | en |
| make-up | cosmetics applied to the face to improve or change your appearance | en |
| make-up | This is the name given to the way the finished yarns are made up (put up) ready for shipment, for example, made up as a cone, on cylindrical crosswound bobbins, sectional warp beams, loom beams and fabric beams | en |
| make-up | The amount of deficiency when a cash flow or capital item is deficient For example, an interest make-up relates to the interest amount above a ceiling percentage | en |
| make-up | Make-up consists of things such as lipstick, eye shadow, and powder which some women put on their faces to make themselves look more attractive or which actors use to change or improve their appearance. Normally she wore little make-up | en |
| make-up | Some instructors permit students to take an exam or complete an assignment that they have missed This is called a "make-up " There is no university-wide policy on make-ups It is left up to the discretion of the course instructor | en |
| make-up | The make-up of something consists of its different parts and the way these parts are arranged. The ideological make-up of the unions is now radically different from what it had been | en |
| make-up | Someone's make-up is their nature and the various qualities in their character. There was some fatal flaw in his makeup, and as time went on he lapsed into long silences or became off-hand. = personality | en |
| make-up | Make-up is used in drawings for a couple of reasons One is for generic aesthetic purposes, trying to have people be as beautiful as possible Another reason, and this applies to more radical applications, is to help differentiate reoccurring characters and to show affiliations amongst characters Some examples of this are the Emperor's Sons and Daughter or Loreli and his brother Trevor The influences for the make-up itself include Japanese comics, Kabuki Theater, the movie Bladerunner and 70's glam rock | en |
| make-up | the arrangement of lines of type and illustrations into pages or sections | en |
| makeup | the way in which someone or something is composed | en |
| makeup | Azrir Asbagh | en |
| makeup | Cosmetics; colorants and other substances applied to the skin to improve its appearance | en |
| makeup | In composition, the arrangement of lines of type and illustrations into page form to top | en |
| makeup | An items composition | en |
| makeup | an event that is substituted for a previously cancelled event; "he missed the test and had to take a makeup"; "the two teams played a makeup one week later" | en |
| makeup | Lipstick, eyeliner, blush, etc , which ironically make Mom look better while making her young daughter look "cheap " | en |
| makeup | The way in which the parts of anything are put together; often, the way in which an actor is dressed, painted, etc | en |
| makeup | cosmetics applied to the face to improve or change your appearance an event that is substituted for a previously cancelled event; "he missed the test and had to take a makeup"; "the two teams played a makeup one week later | en |
| makeup | in personating a character | en |
| makeup | cosmetics; structure; composition; arrangement; disposition, temperament of a person; exam given to a student who missed or failed the first exam isim | en |
| makeup | In the performing arts, material used by actors for cosmetic purposes and to help create the characters they play. Not needed in Greek and Roman theatre because of the use of masks, makeup was used in the religious plays of medieval Europe, in which the angels' faces were painted red and those of God and Christ white or gold. In Elizabethan England, crude makeup methods included powdering the face with chalk (to play ghosts and murderers) or blackening it with burnt cork (to play Moors). As stage lighting improved in the 19th century, theatrical makeup became more artistic; stick greasepaint, invented by Ludwig Leichner in the 1860s, enabled actors to create more subtle characterizations. Stage makeup proved too heavy for motion pictures; in 1910 Max Factor created semiliquid greasepaint makeup suitable for early filmmaking, and in 1928 he created panchromatic makeup to keep pace with the development of incandescent lighting and more sensitive film. Makeup was later further modified for colour filmmaking and for television. See also cosmetics | en |
| makeup | Lipstick, eyeliner, blush,etc which ironically make Mom look better while making her young daughter look "like a tramp " | en |
| makeup | Lipstick, eyeliner, blush, etc which ironically make Mom look better while making her young daughter look "like a tramp " | en |
| makeup | The process of arranging type and graphics on a page, called page makeup | en |