camp
英 [k?mp]
美[k?mp]
- vi. 露營(yíng);扎營(yíng)
- vt. 扎營(yíng);使扎營(yíng)
- n. 露營(yíng)
- n. (Camp)人名;(英)坎普;(瑞典)坎普;(法)康
CET4TEM4考研CET6中高頻詞基本詞匯
詞態(tài)變化
復(fù)數(shù):?camps;第三人稱單數(shù):?camps;過去式:?camped;過去分詞:?camped;現(xiàn)在分詞:?camping;
中文詞源
camp 營(yíng)地
來自PIE *kamp, 彎,圍,即圍起來的一塊平地,原義也指戰(zhàn)場(chǎng)。
英文詞源
- camp
- camp: [16] Latin campus meant ‘open field’. It branched out into various more specialized meanings. One of them, for example, was ‘battle field’: this was borrowed into the Germanic languages as ‘battle’ (German has kampf, for instance, as in the title of Adolf Hitler’s book Mein Kampf ‘My struggle’). Another was ‘place for military exercises’, and this seems to have developed, in the word’s passage via Italian campo and French camp, to ‘place where troops are housed’.
English got the word from French. Camp ‘mannered, effeminate’ [20] is presumably a different word, but its origins are obscure. Latin campus itself was adopted in English in the 18th century for the ‘grounds of a college’. It was originally applied to Princeton university in the USA.
=> campaign, champion, decamp, scamp - camp (n.)
- "place where an army lodges temporarily," 1520s, from French camp, from Italian campo, from Latin campus "open field, level space" (also source of French champ; see campus), especially "open space for military exercise."
A later reborrowing of the Latin word, which had been taken up in early West Germanic as *kampo-z and appeared originally in Old English as camp "contest, battle, fight, war." This was obsolete by mid-15c. Transferred to non-military senses 1550s. Meaning "body of adherents of a doctrine or cause" is 1871. Camp-follower first attested 1810. Camp-meeting is from 1809, originally usually in reference to Methodists. Camp-fever (1758) is any epidemic fever incident to life in a camp, especially typhus or typhoid. - camp (adj.)
- "tasteless," 1909, homosexual slang, of uncertain origin, perhaps from mid-17c. French camper "to portray, pose" (as in se camper "put oneself in a bold, provocative pose"); popularized 1964 by Susan Sontag's essay "Notes on Camp." Campy is attested from 1959.
- camp (v.)
- "to encamp," 1540s, from camp (n.). Related: Camped; camping. Camping out is attested from 1834, American English.
雙語例句
- 1. The two leaders will retire to Camp David for informal discussions.
- 兩位領(lǐng)導(dǎo)人將到戴維營(yíng)進(jìn)行非正式討論。
來自柯林斯例句
- 2. The video was seven minutes of high camp and melodrama.
- 那段錄像里是7分鐘極盡夸張搞笑的鬧劇表演。
來自柯林斯例句
- 3. The rebels attempted a surprise raid on a military camp.
- 叛軍試圖突襲一處軍營(yíng)。
來自柯林斯例句
- 4. Troops tried to set up a lookout post inside a refugee camp.
- 部隊(duì)試圖在難民營(yíng)里設(shè)一個(gè)瞭望哨。
來自柯林斯例句
- 5. At dusk we pitched camp in the middle of nowhere.
- 黃昏時(shí),我們?cè)诿C;囊爸性鸂I(yíng)。
來自柯林斯例句