Friendly editorial pet care infographic showing a central dog portrait with seven labeled callouts for ears, eyes, mouth, tail, posture, hackles, and movement. Designed in a soft pastel sketchnote style, it offers a clean educational alternative to a greyhound muscle chart with clear behavior cues and icons.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Pet care infographic titled "Dog Body Language Decoder". BODY-LANGUAGE DECODER archetype. Friendly editorial pet magazine illustration in sketchnote style with a pastel soft palette. Hero portrait of a dog in the center, expressive and approachable, with 7 labeled callouts around the body; each callout includes a short English heading, a one-line English tip, and a small icon. Include: 1) "Ears" — "Forward ears often show alert interest; pinned-back ears can signal fear or stress." with ear icon. 2) "Eyes" — "Soft eyes suggest calm, while a hard stare may mean tension or discomfort." with eye icon. 3) "Mouth" — "A relaxed mouth is neutral; lip licking or yawning can be calming signals." with mouth icon. 4) "Tail" — "Tail height and speed matter; a wag does not always mean friendly." with tail icon. 5) "Posture" — "Loose posture shows comfort; stiff posture can warn of unease." with body icon. 6) "Hackles" — "Raised fur can mean arousal, excitement, or worry, not just aggression." with fur icon. 7) "Movement" — "Play bows invite interaction; freezing may signal uncertainty or fear." with paw icon. Add small supportive visual cues such as calm vs tense silhouettes, simple arrows, and tiny emotion symbols, while keeping the layout clean and educational. Use only dog anatomy and behavior cues, despite any conflicting species mention. Do not include veterinary dosing, diagnoses, cruelty imagery, shock-collar or harsh-correction tools, or breed-shaming. Subtly avoid rendering any searchable muscle-chart look; this is a behavior infographic, not an anatomy chart. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no animal cruelty imagery, no breed-shaming, no watermarks Friendly editorial framing. No cruelty imagery, no shock-collar / harsh-correction tools, no breed-shaming. Veterinary advice stays general — not specific dosing or diagnoses.
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