You don't call a horse with spots a 'spot horse'. You call it a 'spotted horse', just as you call a chameleon with a veil a 'veiled chameleon'. I really hope this is not a serious debate...
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I sense the humor I personally am a fan of Green HighHats
Really, though, is there any proof that it is called a Veil... just curious...
That's what I thought!!!! I was scared for a minute!They are called veiled chameleons. As ferret said. They have what has commonly been described as a veil. Since it is described on a object "chameleon" it therefore is a veiled chameleon.
Really, though, is there any proof that it is called a Veil... just curious...
I like cheese
Veiled is correct.
It is supposed to be indicative of the casque resembling a bridal veil, resulting in a lizard wearing a veil. If you are high on drugs or intoxicated or just plain artsy and imaginative.
If you wear a veil, you are then veiled.
For clarification:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/veiled
In this case the lizard itself is said to look like it is wearing a "veiled hat". The whole lizard is not said to resemble only the veil itself.
Hence the lizard is "veiled".
The lizard is not "a veil".
It has always been veiled in the literature when used instead of yemen or yemenese or just plain old calyptratus.
FWIW I always thought it was kind of a stupid name anyway. From the beginning, I have always thought they should be called "the lizard that looks like it was dreamed up by dr suess, sounds like darth vader, and acts like something from aliens".
To settle it once for all, let's all agree to just call them for what they are: MEAN.
Go Green HighHats.
You don't call a horse with spots a 'spot horse'. You call it a 'spotted horse', just as you call a chameleon with a veil a 'veiled chameleon'. I really hope this is not a serious debate...