How to use in-sentence of “secrete”:
+ Many poison dart frogs secrete alkaloid toxins through their skin.
+ They are formed of individual soft polyps which in some species live in colonies and secrete a calcite skeleton.
+ They secrete enzymes that allow the parasite to enter other cells.
+ Plants secrete resins for their protective benefits in response to injury.
+ They secrete a waxy coating for defence.
+ Salamanders also secrete poison from glands in their skin, and some additionally have skin glands for secreting courtship pheromones.
+ When they are activated, eosinophils secrete a range of highly toxic proteins and free radicals that kill bacteria and parasites.
+ At the stem end of the pod, glands secrete the capsaicin, which then spreads throughout, but is concentrated on the ribs and seeds.

Example sentences of “secrete”:
+ Minor salivary glands on the tongue secrete the amylase.
+ ScleractiniaStony corals secrete massive calcium carbonate exoskeletons.
+ Hotsuit has been developed to sweat and secrete dopamine.
+ Minor salivary glands on the tongue secrete the amylase.
+ ScleractiniaStony corals secrete massive calcium carbonate exoskeletons.
+ Hotsuit has been developed to sweat and secrete dopamine.
+ Their hairs are irritating, and when disturbed they secrete a noxious fluid which smells like rancid butter.
+ The main cells that make it work are the B cells, which create and secrete antibodies that seek out the invaders and attach to them.
+ Plants, unlike animals, lack glands that produce and secrete hormones.
+ The sebaceous glands of a human fetus “in utero” secrete a substance called Vernix caseosa, a “waxy” or “cheesy” white substance covering the skin of newborn babies.
+ Millipedes can secrete liquids that can burn their predators for protection.
+ When the salamander senses danger, it can secrete this through its skin.
+ Males secrete a mating pheromone that females follow.
