Theories of embodied cognition have suggested that motor activity may influence the consolidation of conceptual knowl-edge. In line with this prediction, behavioral studies have shown retrieval interference effects of a manual motor task formanipulable object concepts. On the other hand, research investigating such effects for abstract concepts is limited. Here,we examined in a behavioral experiment potential effects of the recruitment of the motor system for the consolidation ofdifferent kinds of abstract concepts. Participants were presented auditorily and asked to memorize abstract concepts withmovement referents (e.g., fluidity), abstract concepts without movement referents (e.g., theory), and concrete concepts(e.g., microscope) while engaging in a full-body motor task. All concepts were specific to Science Technology Engineer-ing and Mathematics (STEM) disciplines. Analysis of free recall and recognition performance suggests influence of motorengagement for certain types of STEM concepts during memory encoding and subsequent retrieval.