Аннотация:The article explores correlations between motion verbs and head and hands gestures using the RUPEX corpus.The verbs are divided into four groups based on their meanings. Мonological and dialogical parts of the recordingsare compared along with the speaker’s role and viewpoint in gestures. The pilot analysis of motion verbs in the multimodal corpus showed that the relationships between verb type, non-verbal behavior and speaker’s role depend on acomplex set of factors and manifests itself in different ways in different channels. In the verbal channel no directrelationship between the semantic type of the verb and the speaker’s role was detected; however, the narrators andcommentators who have seen the film used more affectional vocabulary than the reteller while the latter tended to usemore vector-prefixed verbs. In manual channel рrefixes or their absence do not influence the use of hand gestures.Transitive verbs meaning manipulations of different items are more probable to be illustrated by depictive gestures.Predictably, motion verbs in the strict sense are more prone to be supported by observer viewpoint (O-VPT) gestures,while verbs of manipulation are usually used with C-VPT gestures. In cephalic channel motion verbs in the strictsense (relocation of a character) are usually illustrated by O-VPT depictive gestures, and manipulation verbs are moreprobably supported by pantomime C-VPT gestures similar to manual channel. In some head gestures the viewpointis combined. If the verb is repeated by the same or another speaker the gestures differ in both manual and cephalicchannels. Cephalic gesture clusters on motion verbs have mostly a depictive function, which may be considered agestural illustration