“…The basic tenet of cognitive semantics is that various senses of a given polysemous word are neither arbitrary nor idiosyncratic, but instead systematic and semantically motivated (Lakkoff, 1987;Taylor, 1988). There have been multiple lines of research that have sought to investigate the intra-lexical structures of polysemous words such as over (Brugman, 1981;Dewell, 1994;Lakoff, 1987;Tyler and Evans, 2001, 2004), in, on (Beitel et al, 1997Goddard, 2002;Herskovits, 1986) and through (Hilferty, 1999). One of the key concepts in such analyses is image-schema (Johnson, 1987;Lakoff and Johnson, 1980;Lakoff, 1987;Sloń, 1999), which can be defined as the schematic structures which are generated through our perceptual interactions and bodily movements in our physical environment that 'make it possible for us to experience, understand, and reason about our world' (Johnson, 1987: 19).…”