“…If concepts are indeed grounded in primary sensorimotor actions, but can also be subjected to combinatorial processes at the abstract conceptual level (Lakoff, ; Pulvermüller, ), the possibility emerges to think of situations, objects, actions, and events that a person has never observed or performed, or that are impossible in reality, which could also be expressed in language. When language is processed, both on the visual and the auditory level, the motor, perceptual, and emotional systems are activated to simulate the situations described (Adams, ; Gallese, ). The verbally expressed conceptual instruction, for example, when listening to a fairy tale, “think of a horse with a horn on its nose” would create the image of the non‐existent entity “unicorn” that, according to the embodiment approach, inherits the multimodal properties of real horses and real horns.…”