The word gibbous is English, not Latin. It derives from the Latin adjective gibbus meaning humped or convex.
The word comes from the Latin word 'gibbus' which means a hump like a hump-backed whale, with a convex shape, as the Moon has when it's bigger than half but not yet full.
The word 'waxing' comes from the old English word 'weaxing' meaning to grow, and 'gibbous' came from a Latin word meaning hump-backed.
The Luhya word for the English word 'hump' is "liruumba".
"niqqah do the hump"
The Latin word for "having a humpback" is gibber, -era, -erum. The hump itself is gibber, -eris, m.The scientific name of the humpback whale has nothing to do with its back: Megaptera novaeangliae combines the Greek for "large wings" with the Latin for "of New England".
Mound, Hump
convex, bulging, with a hump.
The word hump is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a rounded protuberance found on the back of a camel or other animal or as an abnormality on a person's back; a word for a thing. Example sentence: The dromedary has one hump and the bactrian has two humps.
There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".
Hump
convex, bulging, with a hump.