| 1. | (often initial capital letter ) a mythological, fire-breathing monster, commonly represented with a lion's head, a goat's body, and a serpent's tail. |
| 2. | any similarly grotesque monster having disparate parts, esp. as depicted in decorative art. |
| 3. | a horrible or unreal creature of the imagination; a vain or idle fancy: He is far different from the chimera your fears have made of him. |
| 4. | Genetics. an organism composed of two or more genetically distinct tissues, as an organism that is partly male and partly female, or an artificially produced individual having tissues of several species. |
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.
Note: Figuratively, a “chimera” is a creation of the imagination, especially a wild creation.
"Beestis clepid chymeres, that han a part of ech beest, and suche ben not, no but oonly in opynyoun." [Wyclif, "Prologue"]
chimera chi·me·ra (kī-mēr'ə, kĭ-)
n.
One who has received a transplant of genetically and immunologically different tissue.
Twins with two immunologically different types of red blood cells.
Chimera World-Wide Web
A modular, X Window System-based World-Wide Web browser for Unix. Chimera uses the Athena widget set so Motif is not needed. It supports forms, inline images, TERM, SOCKS, proxy servers, Gopher, FTP, HTTP and local file accesses. Chimera can be extended using external programs. New protocols can easily be added and alternate image formats can be used for inline images (e.g. PostScript).
Version 1.60 is available for (ftp://ftp.cs.unlv.edu/pub/chimera).
(http://unlv.edu/chimera/).
Chimera runs on Sun SPARC SunOS 4.1.x, IBM RS/6000 AIX 3.2.5, Linux 1.1.x. It should run on anything with X11R[3-6], imake and a C compiler.
(1994-11-08)