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Is the foot part of the leg?
Well, is it?
Does the leg begin at the hip and continue to the end of the toes, or does the leg end at the ankle, and have a foot attached? |
The foot is separate. Likewise, it does not count as "the leg" if you are actually only referring to the knee.
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So, wait, the thigh is leg, the calf is leg, but the knee isn't???
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if the foot is part of the leg, does that mean footfootfoot comes from the Isle of Man?
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knee shall be the name of it's calling and it's name shall be knee.
I will say knee again to you...if you do not appease me. |
rofl
is especially funny for me today as I went on a canoe trip with the 7/8 grade and accidentally verbalized the fart in your general direction quote at an appropriate point which amused many for a long time because the kdi in the canoe who was not related to me knew it and all the other MP stuff. |
Is the foot part of the leg? Depends.
During normal everyday usage it is not part of the leg. It's simply along for the ride. The leg ends at the ankle. But during amputation, the doctors will remove the foot too, which means in that situation, it is part of the leg. |
When I eat a chicken leg, there is no foot attatched. Then again, when I eat a chicken thigh, there is no leg attatched. Do chickens even have knees?
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Anatomically speaking even the medical dictionaries vary:
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if the leg and foot are attached, then yes
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Wow! The dictionary entries are honing in on the calf area! What is going on?!? Was there a "calf-man" on that team or what?
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Isn't the calf just the back side of the leg*?
*The lower part of the leg between the knee and ankle. |
I have consulted the highest authority, who informs me that:
"The foot bone connected to the leg bone" So I'd say, no. |
Zen, are you really bored?
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