Quote:
Originally Posted by Clodfobble
Leg has a superseding claim to title. So if thigh and knee, or knee and calf, or all three are involved, it is the "leg." But if knee and only knee is involved, then it shall be named the "knee" and not the "leg."
|
But, the question isn't "is the foot alone sufficient to indicate the entire leg?" The question is, essentially, do "the thigh, knee, calf, and foot" (together) all belong to "the leg," or do they belong to two separate groups, "the leg," and "the foot."
Quote:
Originally Posted by ZenGum
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?
|
This is clearly inclusive of the entire leg, the only part being in question is how far the inclusiveness continues to be in effect; so therefore I fail to see the relevance of your "if only [single body part] is involved" argument.