chimerical

Alternative forms

 * chimaerical, chimærical

Etymology
From, from , from. This term entered English in or around 1638.

Adjective

 * 1) Of or pertaining to a chimera.
 * 2) Being a figment of the imagination; fantastic (in the archaic sense).
 * 3) Inherently fantastic; wildly fanciful.
 * 4)  Resulting from the expression of two or more genes that originally coded for separate proteins.
 * 5)  Impossible to physically produce due to having an impossibly-high saturation or luminosity, but viewable by overlaying an afterimage and a suitably-colored physical image.
 * 1) Inherently fantastic; wildly fanciful.
 * 2)  Resulting from the expression of two or more genes that originally coded for separate proteins.
 * 3)  Impossible to physically produce due to having an impossibly-high saturation or luminosity, but viewable by overlaying an afterimage and a suitably-colored physical image.
 * 1)  Impossible to physically produce due to having an impossibly-high saturation or luminosity, but viewable by overlaying an afterimage and a suitably-colored physical image.

Translations

 * Catalan: quimèric
 * Esperanto: ĥimera
 * French:
 * German:
 * Irish: ciméarach


 * Catalan: quimèric
 * Esperanto: ĥimera
 * German: chimärenhaft
 * Russian: ,
 * Ukrainian: химеристий


 * Arabic: خُرَافِيّ
 * Esperanto: ĥimera
 * German:, wunderhaft
 * Russian: ,
 * Ukrainian: химе́рний, чудернацький


 * French:
 * Italian:
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian:
 * Spanish:
 * Ukrainian: химе́рний


 * Irish:
 * Italian: