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The phrase "make everything up" is correct and usable in written English.
It means to fabricate or invent something, often in a deceitful manner. It can be used in various contexts, such as when someone is telling a lie or when someone is creating a story or explanation. Example: "He didn't know the answer, so he decided to make everything up and hope that no one would notice."
Exact(6)
"It's much easier to write fiction," she says, "because you can just make everything up".
"It's much easier to write fiction, because you can just make everything up," she said, looking toward the opulent view.
Macon (Brenda Withers), the brunette, soon arrives, bearing a basket full of biscuits — Bess is starving — and an adorably brash, adventure-hungry personality ("I'm gonna make everything up as I go!") as big as the unexplored West.
I never write anything factual, for that matter — I always make everything up.
I never write anything factual, for that matter—I always make everything up.
However, this doesn't mean you should make everything up either!
Similar(53)
How can I be sure that the announcers aren't just making everything up, like Orson Welles did with his famous exploding-blimp broadcast?
Novelists spend all day making everything up, so it's no wonder that from time to time they are stricken with reality-envy.
"Danke Schoen" was somewhat choreographed but for "Twist and Shout", Broderick said, "we were just making everything up".
And once again, I found myself making everything up--the setting, the characters, the dialogue, finishing it, handing it in, passing it off as fact.
This time, I am making everything up.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com