Ask at the forum if you have an Ancient or Modern Greek query!

gibbus: Difference between revisions

From LSJ
Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, 5.30
(D_4)
(Gf-D_4)
Line 3: Line 3:
}}
}}
{{Gaffiot
{{Gaffiot
|gf=(1) <b>[[gibbus]], a, um, convexe : Cels. Med. 8, 1.<br />(2) <b>[[gibbus]],¹⁴ ī, m., bosse : Juv. 10, 294 || grosseur, tumeur : Amm. 23, 4.
|gf=(1) <b>[[gibbus]], a, um, convexe : Cels. Med. 8, 1.<br />(2) <b>[[gibbus]],¹⁴ ī, m., bosse : Juv. 10, 294 &#124;&#124; grosseur, tumeur : Amm. 23, 4.||grosseur, tumeur : Amm. 23, 4.
}}
}}

Revision as of 07:24, 14 August 2017

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

gibbus: a, um, adj. cf. κύπτω, κυφός, bent, bowed, crooked; v. gibber,
I hunched, humped, gibbous.
I Adj.: calvaria ex interiore parte concava, extrinsecus gibba, Cels. 8, 1.—
II Subst.
   A gibbus, i, m., a hunch, hump, Juv. 10, 294; 309; 6, 109.—
   B gibba, ae, f., the same, Suet. Dom. 23. —
   2    Transf., a hump-like swelling, protuberance, Amm. 23, 4.
gibbus: i,
I
v. the preced. art. II. A.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

(1) gibbus, a, um, convexe : Cels. Med. 8, 1.
(2) gibbus,¹⁴ ī, m., bosse : Juv. 10, 294 || grosseur, tumeur : Amm. 23, 4.