make up vs montage

make up

verb
  • To draw near to, approach to. 

  • To constitute the components of a whole. 

  • To apply cosmetics. 

  • To compensate (for). 

  • To make peace, to settle a dispute. 

  • To resolve or settle an argument, dispute, conflict, or fight (e.g., with someone). 

  • To make social or romantic advances to; to pay court to. 

  • To invent, to imagine, to concoct 

  • To constitute, to compose. 

  • To prepare (someone) for a theatrical performance by means of costume, cosmetics, etc. 

  • To put together (a substance, material, garment, medicine, etc.) into a specific form; to assemble. 

  • To compensate for (a deficiency, defect, etc.); to supply (something missing). 

  • To invent or fabricate (a story, claim, etc.). 

  • To apply cosmetics or makeup to (a face, facial feature). 

  • To compile or draw up (a list, document, etc.). 

montage

verb
  • To combine into, or depict as, a montage. 

noun
  • The art or process of doing this. 

  • A composite work, particularly an artwork, created by assembling or putting together other elements such as pieces of music, pictures, texts, videos, etc. 

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