A llama is a South American animal with thick hair, which looks like a small camel without a hump. a South American animal with thick hair like wool, and a long neck. Domesticated South American lamoid (see alpaca), maintained in herds in Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Chile, and Argentina. The llama (Lama glama) is used primarily as a pack animal but also as a source of food, wool, hides, tallow for candles, and dried dung for fuel. A 250-lb (113-kg) llama can carry a load of 100-130 lb (45-60 kg) and travel 15-20 mi (25-30 km) a day. It can subsist on little water and a wide variety of plant materials. Though usually white, it may be solid black or brown, or white with black or brown markings. It is usually gentle, but when overloaded or mistreated it will lie down, hiss, spit and kick, and refuse to move. Not known to exist in the wild state, it appears to have been bred from guanacos during or before the Inca civilization
A South American ruminant (Auchenia llama), allied to the camels, but much smaller and without a hump
{i} South American mammal which has soft woolly hair and is used as a beast of burden
A South American mammal of the camel family, Llama glama, used as a domestic beast of burden and a source of wool and meat
The name of the unofficial mascot of the developer technical support team in Apple's now defunct Newton Systems Group See also DTS, LlamaDOS, and Newton Systems Group Source: ADC
A long-necked animal native to South America; used as a pack animal on some trekking and hiking vacations
wild or domesticated South American cud-chewing animal related to camels but smaller and lacking a hump