"There are many frames containing verbs which generally involve a particular of frame element, but where some of the verbs incorporate information about that frame element in their definition.\nConsider, for example, verbs of body movement; typically certain verbs are expected to co-occur with the name of a body part, even when the identity of the body part is clear from the meaning of the verb. A dog wags its tail, people arch their brows, bat their eyes, purse their lips, etc. \nBut in the case of smile, grimace, frown, pout, and scowl, the affected body part is not separately expressed; we say that it is incorporated. \nSome verbs in this frame can optionally express the expected body part: one can say either She blinked or She blinked her eyes. Likewise, in the Placing frame, many verbs incorporate the Goal FE (i.e. the place where the Theme ends up) such as bag.v, bin.v, bottle.v, box.v, cage.v, crate.v, file.v, garage.v. \nNote that it is still possible to further specify the incorporated FE explicitly, as in They bottled the wine in custom-made blue bottles, in which case, in custom-made blue bottles is annotated as the Goal FE, as usual. In defining a new LU, one can specify an incorporated FE."^^ . . . . . .