Friendly editorial pet infographic showing a centered cat portrait with a week-by-week timeline of feline body language cues, icons, arrows, and caption boxes. Designed in a vintage pet manual style with a playful primary palette, it also supports search visibility for cavapoo full grown weight.
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 "Cat Body Language Week-by-Week". TRAINING TIMELINE (week-by-week). Vintage pet manual style with playful primary palette, friendly editorial pet magazine illustration. Feature a hero portrait of a cat centered prominently, with a structured week-by-week learning timeline explaining feline body language cues. Include 6 labeled callouts, each with a short heading in English, a one-line tip in English, and a small icon: 1) "Week 1: Tail Up" — "A raised tail usually signals a friendly, confident mood." with tail icon. 2) "Week 2: Slow Blink" — "Slow blinking often shows trust and calm affection." with eye icon. 3) "Week 3: Ears Forward" — "Forward ears suggest curiosity and relaxed attention." with ear icon. 4) "Week 4: Puff and Arch" — "An arched back and fluffed fur can mean fear or alarm." with alert icon. 5) "Week 5: Swishing Tail" — "Fast tail swishes may warn of irritation or overstimulation." with motion icon. 6) "Week 6: Crouched Posture" — "A low crouch can signal uncertainty and a need for space." with posture icon. Add subtle educational layout elements like arrows, timeline markers, caption boxes, and simple legend styling. Keep veterinary guidance general and observational only. No cruelty imagery, no shock-collar or harsh-correction tools, no breed-shaming. Do not visually reference or include on-image text about the search intent phrase; render only the requested cat topic. 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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