Friday, 8 January 2010

I could have been a shop assistant...

So, can anyone tell me what part of speech 'fecal' is as opposed to 'feces' (I would say 'sic' but that would lead to more jokes, sooo... 'American sp.')* ?

I wonder how I ended up in a career where at some point I would have to explain to someone the difference between the two as in the following paragraph:

'The fecal cholesterol concentration of rats fed on LAB strains increased compared with the control group (P < 0.05). Groups E7304 and MG9-2 showed higher cholesterol contents than Group E7301, and Group E7304 excreted the most cholesterol in fecal than the others.

Is it an adjective?

*I realise this is a very confusing sentence, sorry :D

2 comments:

Shirley said...

Yes fecal is an adjective. Feces is a noun. 'Fecal matter' would work as a noun if person really want to use fecal.

Helen said...

Great,thank you. No he really needs to use 'feces' in the 35 other places he made the same error, I suspect a certain amount of spell-check gone amiss.