To move regularly from side
to side/back and forth
To move a part of one’s body
upwards (esp. head/arm/leg/foot)
To move a part of one’s body
upwards
To move a part of one’s body
downwards
The verbs shake, tremble and quiver may be found with a subject argument semantically
characterized as human or as concrete. But they can also take an object
denoting a part of the body via the metaphor Body part = Human (Goatly 1997):
(16) Mark was so
nervous that his knees were shaking.
Sail typically
occurs with a subject semantically characterized as boat. Its use with a human
agent results from a metonymical process (content for receptacle):
(17) They sailed
the Mediterranean.
Rise designates
upward movement of both human and concrete entities, but the prototypical
argument is human, as shown in the restricted use of rise with human subjects
when it describes body movement:
(18) She rose to
greet me.
Fall, plunge and
plummet, which denote downward movement, may also occur with human and concrete
entities:
(19) He fell off
the horse.
(20) The vase fell
from her hand.
Lastly, the verbs
swing, lift, raise and bend take an object semantically marked as object or
part of the body:
(21) She lifted her
head when I came in.
(22) The suitcase
is too heavy for him to lift.
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