1. The head, brain, occiput, scalp, neck, nape, chest, lungs, heart, etc.
2. Hand, finger, wrist, knuckle, nail, foot, toe, heel, ankle, etc.
3. Shoulder, arm, breast, face, temple, cheek, eye, gum, tear, tooth, etc. (The words for eye, eyelid, eyelash generally take an abbreviated form.)
4. The body, back, spine, thigh, calf of leg, elbow, knee, rib, stomach, spleen, liver, shoulder-blade, etc.
5. Leg, hip, loin, bladder, etc.
6. Mouth, chin, lip, throat, palate, tongue, gullet, jawbone, collarbone, breath, etc.
7. Used apparently only with the word indicating waist.
The word "his," for example, as used with any word in each of these divisions would be as follows: (1) ot; (2) ong; (3) ig; (4) ab; (5) ar; (6) aka; (7) oto.1
The name of the part of the body may even be omitted after the pronoun when the meaning is clear from the context or idiomatically usual. For example, where we should say "He is good looking" they would say "His [face is] good," "face" being understood from the form of the pronoun.2
1Man, E.H.n/an/an/an/a, "On the Aboriginal Inhabitants of the Andaman Islands," , 12: 119–122 (condensed).
2 Portman, M. V., Notes on the Languages of a South Andaman Group of Tribes, 41.