Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A place where tents, huts, or other temporary shelters are set up, as by soldiers, nomads, or travelers.
- noun A cabin or shelter or group of such buildings.
- noun The people using such shelters.
- noun A place in the country that offers simple group accommodations and organized recreation or instruction, as for vacationing children.
- noun Sports A place where athletes engage in intensive training, especially preseason training.
- noun The people attending the programs at such a place.
- noun A prison camp or concentration camp.
- noun Military service; army life.
- noun A group of people who think alike or share a cause; side.
- intransitive verb To make or set up a camp.
- intransitive verb To live in or as if in a camp; settle.
- intransitive verb To shelter or lodge in a camp; encamp.
- noun Deliberate affectation or exaggeration of style, especially of popular or outdated style, for ironic or humorous effect.
- adjective Showing or characterized by camp.
- adjective Given to or characterized by exaggerated, effeminate mannerisms.
- intransitive verb To act in a histrionic or exaggerated manner.
- intransitive verb To act in an exaggerated, effeminate manner.
- intransitive verb To exaggerate or overdramatize.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Conflict; battle.
- noun An English form of the game of foot-ball.
- To surpass, excel, or outrank (others) in a contest. Compare
kemp . - To put into or lodge in a camp, as an army; encamp.
- To afford camping-ground for; afford rest or lodging to.
- To bury in pits, as potatoes; pit.
- To establish or make a camp; go into camp: sometimes with down.
- To live in a camp, as an army: as, we camped there three days.
- To live temporarily in a tent or tents or in rude places of shelter, as for health or pleasure: generally with out.
- noun A place where an army or other body of men is or has been encamped; the collection of tents or other temporary structures for the accommodation of a number of men, particularly troops in a temporary station; an encampment.
- noun A body of troops or other persons encamping together; an army with its camp-equipment.
- noun In British agri., a heap of turnips, potatoes, or other roots laid up in a trench and thickly covered with straw and earth for preservation through the winter. In some places called a pit, in others a bury.
- noun A mustering place for cattle.
- noun [capitalized] In the early history of Australian colonization, the name popularly applied to Sydney, New South Wales, and to Hobart in Tasmania, the British forces being stationed in those places.
- noun A camping-out expedition, as for fishing, shooting, recreation, or the like; a camp-out.
- To fight; contend in battle or in any kind of contest; hence, to strive with others in doing anything.
- To wrangle; argue.
- To play at the game of camp.
- noun A caterpillar.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- intransitive verb To pitch or prepare a camp; to encamp; to lodge in a camp; -- often with out.
- intransitive verb Prov. Eng. To play the game called camp.
- transitive verb To afford rest or lodging for, as an army or travelers.
- noun The ground or spot on which tents, huts, etc., are erected for shelter, as for an army or for lumbermen, etc.
- noun A collection of tents, huts, etc., for shelter, commonly arranged in an orderly manner.
- noun A single hut or shelter.
- noun The company or body of persons encamped, as of soldiers, of surveyors, of lumbermen, etc.
- noun (Agric.), Prov. Eng. A mound of earth in which potatoes and other vegetables are stored for protection against frost; -- called also
burrow andpie . - noun An ancient game of football, played in some parts of England.
- noun a light bedstead that can be folded up onto a small space for easy transportation.
- noun (Arch.) a kind ceiling often used in attics or garrets, in which the side walls are inclined inward at the top, following the slope of the rafters, to meet the plane surface of the upper ceiling.
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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I've been in all sorts of camps -- military camps, hunting camps and camp meetings, but never dreamed of such a thing as a _balloon camp_ before!
Illustrated Science for Boys and Girls Anonymous
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THE "Red Jacket" is another camp; but this, you see, has straight walls, marking it as _a white man's camp_ in form not apparently borrowed from the red men.
Shelters, Shacks and Shanties Daniel Carter Beard 1895
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The depth of my culinary appetite in camp is very shallow.
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The depth of my culinary appetite in camp is very shallow.
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Once again, the Palin camp is trying to avoid responsibility – this time by saying that breaking the law is no big deal, because everybody (apparently, a million everybodies) does it.
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The McCain camp is confident an FEC investigation would find no wrongdoing.
McCain Mocks Own Campaign Finance Law In 'Ridiculous' Way The Huffington Post News Team 2010
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The comment Obama made several weeks ago about McCain's 5o years of experience was a snide comment about his age, but I think the McCain camp is overreaching here.
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I think that the McCain camp is just obsessed with his age.
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Sounds like the McCain camp is sensitive about his age, maybe we should be worried.
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The McCain camp is attempting to persuade Americans that their taxes will increase dramatically with Barack Obama as president.
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Geoff Nunberg went to the mike and professed himself shocked that everyone had paid so little attention to the ghastly government euphemism tender-age shelter (also tender-age camp, tender-age facility, and other variants), applied to the places in three towns about 300 miles outside Houston where migrant children separated from families that crossed the Mexican border are being interned.
Can a Word Capture the Zeitgeist of a Year? No. Maybe. Yes It Can. John Moore, Getty Images 2019
bilby commented on the word camp
"A less daring version, for it can be tamed into smoothness when the wearer is in the haunts of the smooth, is the teased mop. The ferocity mimicked by the hairstyle is further expressed in the studded belts and armlets and earrings in the shape of a skull, but is is clearly a mere affectation. The camp aggressiveness of the display stands in inverse ratio to the social power wielded by the group. Their cultural uniformity is actually competitiveness and does not lead to solidarity."
- 'One man's mutilation is another man's beautification', Germaine Greer in The Madwoman's Underclothes.
September 1, 2008