Metaphors are commonly used by individuals to represent and
reason about time in daily conversations. These metaphors are
often paired with gestures that reveal the possible axes along
which our internal conceptualisation of time may be aligned
against. The present study attempts to use such gestures as
temporal primes to investigate how individuals conceptualize
time. Results revealed effects of congruency along the sagittal
axis, but not the lateral. This suggests that individuals
primarily represent time most strongly along the sagittal axis.
Implications for models of how individuals represent time as
well as methods of investigating how time is represented in the
mind are discussed.