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'excrete' is a correct and usable word in written English.
It is a verb that means to pass waste from the body. For example: The human body excretes waste in various forms.
Exact(57)
According to most advertising, I am meant to excrete a thin blue liquid, and to keep it to myself.
I'm meant to excrete the lining of my womb discreetly, fragrantly and silently.
Instead, it offers us a fictional and daft sequence in Newgate, with Macleane having his end away with the gaoler's daughter while Plunkett attempts to excrete the ruby.
Deuteronomy 23 instructs Jews to excrete outside camp and to carry a spade to bury the result.
But while alive, they excrete large amounts of toxic sludge.On Thai shrimp farms, the traditional way of dealing with this sludge is to toss it in the nearest river.
The turtle's gills, then, not only take in oxygen, they also excrete urea.If there is insufficient water to swim in, however, the turtles have to resort to desperate measures.
And the Japanese authorities have been distributing tablets of ordinary, non-radioactive iodine to the local population, on the basis that bodies already well stocked with iodine don't bother to assimilate any more of the stuff and will excrete, rather than accumulate, the fallout.
They excrete their skeletons as they grow, and this forms the basis of the reef.
Similar(3)
But the excretion rate equals total quantity excreted per millilitre of filtrate per minute, and this value is directly proportional to its plasma concentration.
The grain of sand myth is so entrenched that the V&A has included a video showing precisely how pearls are formed – how tiny tapeworm larvae that live in the digestive systems of animals such as sharks and stingrays are excreted and then, very rarely, manage to get into water-filtering shellfish.
These samples should reveal how many of the phenolics found in cider are excreted.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com