Greek and roman myths
The chimera fish is named after the mythical creature from Greek mythology called the Chimera. This mythological beast had the parts of multiple animals and so does the chimera fish, as it has features resembling other fish species.
Witches bring the dead back to life as zombies.
No, a Chimera is a mouse type thing and looks a bit like a big mouse or a small guinea pig. Hope this helps.
A chimera is a creature in Greek mythology composed of parts from various different animals, like a lion, goat, and serpent. In genetics, a chimera refers to an organism with genetically distinct cells from two different zygotes. In popular culture, the term chimera can be used to describe a fictional creature combining traits of multiple animals.
Bellerophon got a large block of lead and mounted it on his spear. Then he flew head-on towards the Chimera, holding out the spear as far as he could. Before he broke off his attack, he managed to lodge the block of lead inside the Chimera's throat. The beast's fire-breath melted the lead, and blocked its air passage. The Chimera suffocated, and Bellerophon returned victorious to King Iobates. and got all the ladys
Bellerophon (flying on Pegasus) slew the Chimera.
The Chimera.
The general consensus is that Bellerphon slayed the Chimera (which had the heads of a lion, goat and the tail of a snake) with the help of the Pegasus in Greek Myth, though it/they started as Lycian myth. The first reference in print is Homer's Iliad.
The Chimera is a noun, a creature.e.g. Alex stared at the Chimera.See - you use it as you would with any other noun.
Greece mythology
The Chimera was actually from a myth in ancient Greece so people could say that it is from ancient Greece.
If you mean a chimera then it comes from this other monster Echidna (not the anteater) Answer 2: 'Chimerical' comes from Chimera, who was monster - not a god.
Not a god, two monsters named Typhon and Echidna.
Was Chimera nocturnal
yes the chimera is in the odessy
Could be "3 Heads of a Chimera" but although some sources have represented the Chimera with three heads (the lion's head as the main, then the goat's head sprouted from its back, and the serpent's or Dragon's head on its tail), but the popular myth tells of the single, fire-vomiting head.
I put the words together and I think it is Liman. But I might be wrong. A sphynx or a lamia, depending on the myth and culture.