The naming of the parts of the body serves to demonstrate Directed Pronunciation in a simple and curious way. The body names are directed towards the parts of the body, from the axis point of the mouth. The word for "mouth", itself, is curiously forced to expand around this central pivot point. The rest of the parts of the body are then related in the direction you would expect to find them. By using the correct direction we achieve the correct pronunciation, the correct sense.
The body, of course, has some movable parts that can go up and down and this can produce variations in the position and thus pronunciation... like, well, like arms, for example, etc. [use your imagination].
Where we expect to find things, then, helps to define the pronunciation of a whole range of obvious vocabulary like sky (high), floor(low), etc. etc.
Language is very indicative. Language itself was developed as a tool and the words evolved to give exact information. Therefore, in any language "sky" will always be directed above us, the horizon will always be projected horizontally. This is man mapping his world through language.
What is most interesting here, then, is the idea that all words will have a mirror translation and that this translation must have the same sense, the same direction, the same directed pronunciation. This sense, is the basic building block of grammar.
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