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chimera
[ kahy-meer-uh ]
noun
- Often Chimera. Greek Mythology. a fire-breathing monster, commonly represented with a lion's head, a goat's body, and a serpent's tail.
- any grotesque monster having disparate parts, as depicted or described in art, legend, fantasy fiction, video games, etc.
- a strange, horrible, or impossible idea or figment of the imagination:
He is far different from the chimera your fears have made of him.
Without equality, unity is a chimera.
- anything created by taking parts or aspects of different kinds of things and combining them:
We are like an audio-art chimera, in that we act as part literary journal, part music showcase, and part storytelling podcast.
- Genetics. an organism composed of two or more genetically distinct tissues, such as one produced artificially by combining cells or tissues from different species:
Chimeras were generated by splicing West Nile and Zika viruses into the genetic backbone of two different insect-specific viruses.
adjective
- being or relating to a chimera or chimeras:
The chimera embryos used in this research are sheep embryos containing human cells.
chimera
/ kɪ-; kaɪˈmɪərə /
noun
- often capital Greek myth a fire-breathing monster with the head of a lion, body of a goat, and tail of a serpent
- a fabulous beast made up of parts taken from various animals
- a wild and unrealistic dream or notion
- biology an organism, esp a cultivated plant, consisting of at least two genetically different kinds of tissue as a result of mutation, grafting, etc
chimera
- A monster in classical mythology who had the head of a lion, the body of a goat, and the tail of a dragon or serpent.
Notes
Other Words From
- chi·mer·ic chi·maer·ic adjective
- chi·mer·ism chi·maer·ism noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of chimera1
Word History and Origins
Origin of chimera1
Example Sentences
Also known as a spookfish or chimera, ghost sharks are closely related to sharks and rays.
The fact is that the subcommittee has wasted nearly a year and a half chasing a chimera.
This approach, which involves generating only skin tissue, could help avoid ethical concerns about using human-animal chimeras to produce organs for medical use.
Freud, who catalyzed the study of dreams with his foundational 1899 treatise, would have discounted this as a mere chimera of the wishful unconscious.
“She was kind of a chimera, rather than a knowable quantity — intellectual, bright and a little bit mysterious in some way that I can’t quite articulate,” he says.
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