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Veil vs Secrete - What's the difference?

veil | secrete | Related terms |

Veil is a related term of secrete.


As verbs the difference between veil and secrete

is that veil is to don, or garb with, a veil while secrete is .

As a noun veil

is something hung up, or spread out, to hide an object from view; usually of gauze, crape, or similar diaphanous material, to hide or protect the face.

As an adjective secrete is

secreted.

veil

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • Something hung up, or spread out, to hide an object from view; usually of gauze, crape, or similar diaphanous material, to hide or protect the face.
  • * Bible, Matthew xxvii. 51
  • The veil of the temple was rent in twain.
  • * Milton
  • She, as a veil down to the slender waist, / Her unadorned golden tresses wore.
  • A cover; disguise; a mask; a pretense.
  • * Shakespeare
  • [I will] pluck the borrowed veil of modesty from the so seeming Mistress Page.
  • * 2007 . Zerzan, John. Silence . p. 4.
  • Beckett complains that "in the forest of symbols" there is never quiet, and longs to break through the veil of language to silence.
  • The calyptra of mosses.
  • A membrane connecting the margin of the pileus of a mushroom with the stalk; -- called also velum.
  • A covering for a person or thing; as, a caul; a nun's veil; a paten veil; an altar veil; a Moslem veil.
  • (zoology) velum (A circular membrane round the cap of medusa)
  • (mycology) A thin layer of tissue which is attached to or covers a mushroom.
  • Verb

  • To don, or garb with, a veil.
  • To conceal as with a veil.
  • The forest fire was veiled by smoke, but I could hear it clearly.

    secrete

    English

    Etymology 1

    First attested in 1678: from the (etyl) participle .

    Adjective

    (-)
  • (obsolete, rare) separated
  • * 1678 : , The True Intellectual System of the Universe , book 1, chapter 4, pages 307 and 582:
  • they ?uppo?ing Two other Divine Hypo?ta?es Superiour thereunto, which were perfectly Secrete from Matter.
    This ?o containeth all things, as not being yet ?ecrete and di?tinct''; ''whereas in the Second they are di?cerned and di?tingui?hed by Rea?on''; that is, they are ''Actually di?tingui?hed'' in their ''Ideas''; ''whereas the Fir?t is the Simple and Fecund Power of all things.

    Etymology 2

    First directly attested in 1728; attested as the past-participial adjective secreted in 1707: from (etyl) and the (etyl) secretar.

    Verb

  • To extract a substance from blood, sap, or similar to produce and emit waste for excretion or for the fulfilling of a physiological function.
  • * Carpenter
  • Why one set of cells should secrete bile, another urea, and so on, we do not know.
  • * 2008 , Stephen J. McPhee, Maxine A. Papadakis, et al., Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment , McGraw-Hill Medical, page 1202:
  • Many tumors secrete two or more different hormones.
  • * 1863 : (author), Frances Elizabeth Kingsley (editor), Charles Kingsley, his Letters and Memories of his Life (first published posthumously in 1877), page 156 (8th edition: 1880)
  • If you won’t believe my great new doctrine (which, by the bye, is as old as the Greeks), that souls secrete their bodies, as snails do shells, you will remain in outer darkness.
  • * 1887 : , Democracy and Other Addresses , page 15 (1892 reprint)
  • Let me not be misunderstood. I see as clearly as any man possibly can, and rate as highly, the value of wealth, and of hereditary wealth, as the security of refinement, the feeder of all those arts that ennoble and beautify life, and as making a country worth living in. Many an ancestral hall here in England has been a nursery of that culture which has been of example and benefit to all. Old gold has a civilizing virtue which new gold must grow old to be capable of secreting .

    Etymology 3

    Alteration of verb sense of secret

    Verb

    (secret)
  • To conceal.
  • * 1914 : The Pacific Reporter , volume 142, page 450 (West Publishing Company)
  • Plaintiffs filed an affidavit for an attachment, alleging that defendant was about to assign, secrete , and dispose of his property with intent to delay and defraud his creditors, and was about to convert his property into money to place it beyond the reach of his creditors.
  • * 1997 : Chris Horrocks, Introducing Foucault , page 43 (Totem Books, Icon Books; ISBN 1840460865)
  • Whereas the Renaissance had allowed madness into the light, the classical age saw it as scandal or shame. Families secreted mad uncles and strange cousins in asylums.
  • With away, to steal.
  • The royal jewels were secreted away in the middle of the night, sub rosa .
    Usage notes
    * The present participle and past forms secreting and secreted are heteronymous with the corresponding forms of the similar verb secret, and this can create ambiguity when the word is encountered in print.

    References

    * “ †se?crete, a.'']” listed in the ''[[w:Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford English Dictionary] , second edition (1989) (adjective) * OED (second edition), “ secrete, v. ” (verb and figurative senses) English back-formations ----