| 1. | facial cosmetics, as eye shadow or lipstick. |
| 2. | cosmetics used on other parts of the body, as to cover birthmarks. |
| 3. | the application of cosmetics. |
| 4. | the ensemble or effect created by such application: Her makeup was subtle but very effective. |
| 5. | the total ensemble of cosmetics, wigs, costumes, etc., used by an actor or other performer. |
| 6. | the manner of being made up or put together; composition: the makeup of a team; the makeup of a situation. |
| 7. | physical or mental constitution: the makeup of a criminal. |
| 8. | the art, technique, or process of arranging or laying out, as pages in a publication. |
| 9. | the appearance of a page, book, newspaper, or the like, resulting from the arrangement and the variation in size and style of the printed elements: The makeup would be helped by a picture in this corner. |
| 10. | Printing. the arrangement of set type, cuts, etc., into columns or pages. |
| 11. | an examination, assignment, or the like, given to offset a student's previous absence or failure. |
| 12. | an amount owed; balance. |

verb, made, mak⋅ing, noun | 1. | to bring into existence by shaping or changing material, combining parts, etc.: to make a dress; to make a channel; to make a work of art. |
| 2. | to produce; cause to exist or happen; bring about: to make trouble; to make war. |
| 3. | to cause to be or become; render: to make someone happy. |
| 4. | to appoint or name: The President made her his special envoy. |
| 5. | to put in the proper condition or state, as for use; fix; prepare: to make a bed; to make dinner. |
| 6. | to bring into a certain form: to make bricks out of clay. |
| 7. | to convert from one state, condition, category, etc., to another: to make a virtue of one's vices. |
| 8. | to cause, induce, or compel: to make a horse jump a barrier. |
| 9. | to give rise to; occasion: It's not worth making a fuss over such a trifle. |
| 10. | to produce, earn, or win for oneself: to make a good salary; to make one's fortune in oil. |
| 11. | to write or compose: to make a short poem for the occasion. |
| 12. | to draw up, as a legal document; draft: to make a will. |
| 13. | to do; effect: to make a bargain. |
| 14. | to establish or enact; put into existence: to make laws. |
| 15. | to become by development; prove to be: You'll make a good lawyer. |
| 16. | to form in the mind, as a judgment or estimate: to make a decision. |
| 17. | to judge or interpret, as to the truth, nature, meaning, etc. (often fol. by of): What do you make of it? |
| 18. | to estimate; reckon: to make the distance at ten miles. |
| 19. | to bring together separate parts so as to produce a whole; compose; form: to make a matched set. |
| 20. | to amount to; bring up the total to: Two plus two makes four. That makes an even dozen. |
| 21. | to serve as: to make good reading. |
| 22. | to be sufficient to constitute: One story does not make a writer. |
| 23. | to be adequate or suitable for: This wool will make a warm sweater. |
| 24. | to assure the success or fortune of: a deal that could make or break him; Seeing her made my day. |
| 25. | to deliver, utter, or put forth: to make a stirring speech. |
| 26. | to go or travel at a particular speed: to make 60 miles an hour. |
| 27. | to arrive at or reach; attain: The ship made port on Friday. Do you think he'll make 80? |
| 28. | to arrive in time for: to make the first show. |
| 29. | to arrive in time to be a passenger on (a plane, boat, bus, train, etc.): If you hurry, you can make the next flight. |
| 30. | Informal. to gain or acquire a position within: He made the big time. |
| 31. | to receive mention or appear in or on: The robbery made the front page. |
| 32. | to gain recognition or honor by winning a place or being chosen for inclusion in or on: The novel made the bestseller list. He made the all-American team three years in a row. |
| 33. | Slang. to have sexual intercourse with. |
| 34. | Cards.
|
| 35. | to earn, as a score: The team made 40 points in the first half. |
| 36. | Slang. (esp. in police and underworld use)
|
| 37. | to close (an electric circuit). |
| 38. | South Midland and Southern U.S. to plant and cultivate or produce (a crop): He makes some of the best corn in the country. |
| 39. | to cause oneself, or something understood, to be as specified: to make sure. |
| 40. | to show oneself to be or seem in action or behavior (usually fol. by an adjective): to make merry. |
| 41. | to be made, as specified: This fabric makes up into beautiful drapes. |
| 42. | to move or proceed in a particular direction: They made after the thief. |
| 43. | to rise, as the tide or water in a ship. |
| 44. | South Midland and Southern U.S. (of a crop) to grow, develop, or mature: It looks like the corn's going to make pretty good this year. |
| 45. | make down, Chiefly Pennsylvania German. to rain or snow: It's making down hard. |
| 46. | make fast, Chiefly Nautical. to fasten or secure. |
| 47. | make shut, Chiefly Pennsylvania German. to close: Make the door shut. |
| 48. | the style or manner in which something is made; form; build. |
| 49. | production with reference to the maker; brand: our own make. |
| 50. | disposition; character; nature. |
| 51. | the act or process of making. |
| 52. | quantity made; output. |
| 53. | Cards. the act of naming the trump, or the suit named as trump. |
| 54. | Electricity. the closing of an electric circuit. |
| 55. | Jewelry. the excellence of a polished diamond with regard to proportion, symmetry, and finish. |
| 56. | Slang. identifying information about a person or thing from police records: He radioed headquarters for a make on the car's license plate. |
| 57. | make out,
|
| 58. | make over,
|
| 59. | make for,
|
| 60. | make off,
|
| 61. | make off with, to carry away; steal: While the family was away, thieves made off with most of their valuables. |
| 62. | make on, Chiefly Pennsylvania German. to turn on, light, or ignite (esp. a light or fire): Make the light on. |
| 63. | make up,
|
| 64. | make up to,
|
| 65. | make a play for, to try to get: He made a play for his brother's girlfriend. They made a play for control of the company's stock. |
| 66. | make as if or as though, Informal. to act as if; pretend: We will make as if to leave, then come back and surprise him. |
| 67. | make away with,
|
| 68. | make believe, to pretend; imagine: The little girl dressed in a sheet and made believe she was a ghost. |
| 69. | make bold or so bold, to have the temerity; be so rash; dare: May I make so bold as to suggest that you stand when they enter? |
| 70. | make book, Slang.
|
| 71. | make colors, Nautical. to hoist an ensign, as on board a warship. |
| 72. | make do, to function, manage, or operate, usually on a deprivation level with minimal requirements: During the war we had no butter or coffee, so we had to make do without them. |
| 73. | make good,
|
| 74. | make heavy weather,
|
| 75. | make it,
|
| 76. | make it so, Nautical. strike the ship's bell accordingly: said by the officer of the watch when the hour is announced. |
| 77. | make like, Informal. to try or pretend to be like; imitate: I'm going to go out and make like a gardener. |
| 78. | make one's manners, Southern U.S.
|
| 79. | make sail, Nautical.
|
| 80. | make time. time (def. 52). |
| 81. | make water,
|
| 82. | make with, Slang.
|
| 83. | on the make, Informal.
|
| 84. | put the make on, Slang. to make sexual overtures to. |

make (so)
|
make up
Put together, construct or compose, as in The druggist made up the prescription, or The tailor said he could make up a suit from this fabric. This usage was first recorded in 1530.
Constitute, form, as in One hundred years make up a century. [Late 1500s]
Change one's appearance; apply cosmetics. For example, He made himself up as an old man. [c. 1800]
Devise a fiction or falsehood; invent. For example, Mary is always making up stories for her children, or Is that account true or did you make it up? This usage was first recorded in 1828.
Compensate for, provide for a deficiency, as in Can you make up the difference in the bill? or What he lacks in height he makes up in skill. This usage was first recorded in 1538. Also see make up for lost time.
Repeat a course, take a test or do an assignment at a later time because of previous absence or failure. For example, Steve will have to make up calculus this summer, or The professor is letting me make up the exam tomorrow.
Also, make it up. Resolve a quarrel, as in The Sweeneys argue a lot but they always make up before going to sleep, or Will you two ever make it up? The first usage was first recorded in 1699, the variant in 1669.
Put in order, as in We asked them to make up the room for us, or Can you make up another bed in this room? [Early 1800s] Also see the subsequent idioms beginning with make up.