Just my two cents.
Doesn't Shakespeare mention a "gibbous Moon" meaning the inflated appearance of the full moon as it rises---and appears larger than usual through the atmospheric lens?
Art
>
> From: "Barney, Winston" <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: 2003/09/18 Thu PM 01:44:20 EDT
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Define the term "gibbous"
>
> "Gibbous" comes from the Latin, "gibber / gibbus" meaning humped,
> humpbacked, protuberant, or bent according to Roland Brown's book
> "Composition of Scientific Words".
>
> Winston Barney
>
> Subject: Define the term "gibbous"
>
>
> > I keep encountering the erm "gibbous" to refer to the
> > shell shape. Will someone explain this term to me,
> > please?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > linda
>
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