@prefix rdf: . @prefix dbnary-eng: . @prefix ontolex: . dbnary-eng:__ws_3_leopard__Noun__1 rdf:type ontolex:LexicalSense . @prefix dbnary: . dbnary-eng:__ws_3_leopard__Noun__1 dbnary:senseNumber "3" . @prefix skos: . dbnary-eng:__ws_3_leopard__Noun__1 skos:example _:b6330122 ; skos:definition _:b6330121 . _:b6330121 rdf:value "(heraldiccharge) A lion passant guardant."@en . _:b6330122 rdf:value "Sometimes there is confusion over the heraldic leopard, the question being\u2014When is a leopard not a leopard? There is a theory that the lion and leopard were the same thing, and that they were named entirely depending on their attitude\u2014thus if the animal was passant guardant it was a leopard, but when rampant it was a lion. Nowadays a leopard is the genuine spotted article and quite unmistakeable. Some people still speak, wrongly, of the leopards of England, but it does no great harm as it is an ancient expression and everybody knows what it means."@en . @prefix dcterms: . _:b6330122 dcterms:bibliographicCitation "1968, Charles MacKinnon of Dunakin, The Observer's Book of Heraldry, pages 68\u201369:"@en .