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when it is in the zoo
hi im ekatrina novakov here i am again,so who looks like a leapord, leapord gegos do ther the same looking lizard as a leapord the same spots there yellow with black spots same as the leapord well that's all i know, bye! well i know alot about lizards but just for now im just saying this!
In short, the proverb 'rain beats a leopard's skin but it does not wash out the spots' means that, no matter how much you try, you can't change a person/something.
When it grows older it looses its white spots. But it doesnt change colour
Leopards have a natural camoflauge that their precourser species evolved over thousands of years. This gives the leopards their spots.
certain characteristics in a person never changes from cradle to grave.that is meaning. your individuality shall show itself off;you cannot change yourself.
The spots are called "rosettes". These rosettes provide camouflage, breaking up their shape when viewed against the textures and colours of their natural environment, aiding them in avoiding aggression from larger animals or aiding the stealthy hunt. While the above answer is somewhat correct, cheetahs actually do have spots while jaguars have rosettes.
No, the leopard doesn't change its spots. This is a metaphor for change that cannot be expected in a person.
The moral of the story is that to blend into your environment you need to change your appearance to match that of the background.
It means that you cant change who you are.
The nouns in the sentence are: leopard and spots.
A leopard