make up vs threap

make up

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

  • To constitute the components of a whole. 

  • To draw near to, approach to. 

  • To apply cosmetics. 

  • To compensate (for). 

  • To make peace, to settle a dispute. 

  • 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.). 

threap

verb
  • To argue; bicker; scold; rebuke 

  • To denounce. 

  • To cozen or cheat. 

  • To maintain obstinately against denial or contradiction; to insist (on). 

  • To cry out; complain; contend. 

  • To contradict. 

  • To affirm; to express with conviction. 

noun
  • A superstition or freet. 

  • Stubborn insistence. 

  • An altercation, quarrel, argument. 

  • An accusation or serious charge. 

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