Citations:feces

used with singular verbs

 * 1979, W. J. Miller, Dairy Cattle Feeding and Nutrition ISBN 0323138055, page 92:
 * Most of the endogenous excretion of sodium, chlorine, potassium, and magnesium is through the urine, whereas feces is the main endogenous excretion route of iron, zinc, manganese, and cadmium (Table 5.10).
 * 1991, Keith Allan, Kate Burridge, Euphemism & dysphemism: language used as shield and weapon ISBN 0195066227:
 * Why is urine used in remedies in many parts of the world, whereas feces is not (or very rarely, see later discussion)?
 * 2010, Harvey Molotch, Laura Noren, Toilet: Public Restrooms and the Politics of Sharing ISBN 0814761208, page 105:
 * Urine is sterile but nitrogen rich, whereas feces is both nitrogen rich and full of pathogens. Kira notes that historically urine was valuably repurposed as “one of mankind's oldest known forms of 'soap,' since oxidized urine produces ammonia
 * 2012, John Ryan Haule, Tantra & Erotic Trance: Volume One - Outer Work ISBN 0977607682, page 166
 * But feces is surely something different. The esoterist would admit the difference, but tells us it is a difference in degree not in kind. In fact, the quantity and degree of the impurities we can contemplate while seeing through them to their esoteric
 * 2012, Matthew Hutson, The 7 Laws of Magical Thinking ISBN 1101561734:
 * It is too much. Nature mocks us, and poets live in torture. We would love to see ourselves as immortal beings, but feces is the sludge in the mechanics of magical thinking.