What's the difference between trusty and unsecret?

Trusty


Definition:

  • (superl.) Admitting of being safely trusted; justly deserving confidence; fit to be confided in; trustworthy; reliable.
  • (superl.) Hence, not liable to fail; strong; firm.
  • (superl.) Involving trust; as, a trusty business.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In March, the Tories reappointed their trusty old attack dogs, M&C Saatchi, to work alongside the lead agency, Euro RSCG, and M&C Saatchi's chief executive, David Kershaw, wasted no time in setting out his stall, saying: "It's a fallacy that online has replaced offline in terms of media communications."
  • (2) In such destructive form Ighalo needs only the slightest sniff at goal and typically his trusty sidekick, Troy Deeney, was the provider, heading down a crossfield pass from Almen Abdi.
  • (3) He is the Princess Di of the political world …" Or of Margaret Thatcher 's trusty bulldog Bernard Ingham: "Brick-red of face, beetling of brow, seemingly built to withstand hurricanes, Sir Bernard resembled a half-timbered bomb shelter."
  • (4) I finally found my trusty rubber friend amongst kirby grips and tissues, and clumsily put it on, adding buoyantly: “I’m really looking forward to this!” Everything was then going tickety-boo until my rubber friend went off-piste and wedged itself stubbornly somewhere between my cervix and uterus.
  • (5) In subsequent years, armed with his trusty sword, Excalibur (a superannuated prop from John Boorman 's film of the same name), he persistently challenged the law against assembling at Stonehenge, while the site itself grew increasingly to resemble one of the military encampments on nearby Salisbury Plain.
  • (6) In the literature exist investigations made to extensive series of patients, with premalignant oral lesions or suspicious of malignancy, in which it has been employed toluidine blue (TB), to verify the trustiness of this method as a resource for support in clinical diagnosis.
  • (7) It is urgent to create a national trusty and dynamic structure to make possible the organization and coordination of CME and respective evaluation.
  • (8) Five male establishment trusties with top security clearance were locked in a room for four months and produced a unanimous report recommending some changes, a few of which have made it into law in the USA Freedom Act.
  • (9) Southampton are without a manager and start pre-season back on trusty square one but still the rumours fly.
  • (10) According to trusty Wikipedia, Leighton has three children, Steel has three and Rake has four (and five stepchildren).
  • (11) Part of the reason that we aimed low was our trusty old friend – the Lili model (Leading Indicator for Leading Indicators).
  • (12) They were cheered on by the trusties of the British press – a fertile recruiting ground for British intelligence and the CIA over many years.
  • (13) Labour ISC trusty George Howarth implied that the ISC hadn't – indeed, had only examined the issue after the Guardian's exposé in June, which he deemed legitimate but "unwise".
  • (14) You spend a couple of hours getting to know your trusty steed, learning how to handle him or her, before setting off on a mapped route along the Rota Vicentina, staying in pre-booked guesthouses or hotels en route.
  • (15) And, in the case of Molly Drake, a trusty outlet for a side of her personality rarely revealed by her outwardly sunny disposition.
  • (16) Back in London, my trusty e-cig became the object of increasing curiosity.
  • (17) The Tories' starchy blue "Invitation to Join the Government of Britain" reminds me of a book of trusty, well-established hymns.
  • (18) For those trusty conservative cliches about getting on and getting ahead are unravelling.
  • (19) He smiles as he lugs his trusty axe into a waiting car.
  • (20) "I often," he says, "found myself in a position to discover more about the real lives of stars when my trusty tape recorder was off…" What notes he made are on "scrappy bits of paper" whose relevance only he can understand.

Unsecret


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To disclose; to divulge.
  • (a.) Not secret; not close; not trusty; indiscreet.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) These results suggest that unsecreted collagen precursors accumulate in vesicular compartments within which partial polymerization can occur.
  • (2) The fate of the unsecreted collagen precursors contained in Golgi-derived saccules and newly formed dense bodies was followed by electron microscopy.
  • (3) These results suggested that in unsecreted vacuoles accumulated in the odontoblasts as a result of colchicine administration the polymerization of collagen fibrils with native structures can occur.
  • (4) The liver ultrastructure of this variant is therefore different from that of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency with the genotype PiZZ in which aggregates of an abnormal, unsecreted alpha-1-antitrypsin accumulate in the endoplasmic reticulum of the hepatocytes.
  • (5) Plasma protein secretion by ethanol-treated liver slices was 22-32% lower than controls, but there was no detectable retention of unsecreted plasma proteins in the ethanol-treated liver tissue.
  • (6) In E. coli, transcription of the preproenzyme coding sequence from a bacterial promoter results primarily in the accumulation of unsecreted, enzymatically inactive polypeptides, immunologically related to the authentic protease.
  • (7) An embarrassed Secret Service – which is so unsecret in Washington that it places recruitment adverts on the back of buses – is scrambling to work out how the couple talked their way past security guards on Tuesday, despite not appearing on the invitation list, to penetrate one of the most protected buildings on the planet.

Words possibly related to "unsecret"