Feces in the mail are mainly clinical stool samples (from pets, animals) or, more importantly, colorectal samples (smears) used to detect occult blood from the intestine or colon.
Both of these are legitimate uses for the mail, but MUST be identified at the time of mailing and prominently marked with BIOHAZARD labeling approved by the USPS, USDA and FTC. This material is separated from the mail at the earliest possible points in the mail stream to reduce the risk of bio-contamination, both to the mail and to postal workers.
*In 2006, the Postal Service discontinued shipment of the more-hazardous biological samples (category A) and these must now be sent by a private shipper. For more information consult the related link or USPS Publication 52 : Hazardous, Restricted, or Perishable Mail.
Feces is body waste that comes from the food you eat. It usually has an odor and is brown in color. To mail something means to send it. So if your doctor wants you to mail them your feces, it means you would put it in the provided containers and put that in the mailbox.If you mean "male" as in the gender that father's children, then male feces would be body waste that comes from men, boys, or male animals.If you mean "male fetus," then that is an unborn boy that is still in his mother's womb.
It is brown like us
The services that the mail offers in the US are certified mail, registered mail, insured mail, express mail, and many more.
Yes, US mail should be capitalized as it is an abbreviation for United States mail.
No, US Postal Regulations prohibit the placing of anything but US Mail either in, or on, mail boxes.
No, it is illegal to sell human feces in the US as it is considered biological waste and a potential health hazard. Any sale or distribution of human feces would violate sanitation regulations and pose significant public health risks.
yes
UPS, US Mail,....
yes ders mail
Assuming you mean the US and not the continent of America then it is the US Mail USPS
It costs 0.62€ to mail a letter from Italy to the US.
It did cost $1.10 to mail a postcard in the US in 2003.