(camps, camping, camped)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
A camp is a collection of huts and other buildings that is provided for a particular group of people, such as refugees, prisoners, or soldiers, as a place to live or stay.
...a refugee camp...
2,500 foreign prisoners-of-war, including Americans, had been held in camps near Tambov.
N-COUNT: oft n N
2.
A camp is an outdoor area with buildings, tents, or caravans where people stay on holiday.
N-VAR
3.
A camp is a collection of tents or caravans where people are living or staying, usually temporarily while they are travelling.
...gypsy camps...
We'll make camp on that hill ahead.
N-VAR
4.
If you camp somewhere, you stay or live there for a short time in a tent or caravan, or in the open air.
We camped near the beach.
VERB: V
•
Camp out means the same as
camp.
For six months they camped out in a caravan in a meadow at the back of the house.
PHRASAL VERB: V P
• camping
They went camping in the wilds.
...a camping trip.
N-UNCOUNT
5.
You can refer to a group of people who all support a particular person, policy, or idea as a particular camp.
The press release provoked furious protests from the Gore camp and other top Democrats.
N-COUNT: usu supp N
6.
If you describe someone's behaviour, performance, or style of dress as camp, you mean that it is exaggerated and amusing, often in a way that is thought to be typical of some male homosexuals. (INFORMAL)
James Barron turns in a delightfully camp performance.
ADJ
•
Camp is also a noun.
The video was seven minutes of high camp and melodrama.
N-UNCOUNT
7.
8.
If a performer camps it up, they deliberately perform in an exaggerated and often amusing way. (INFORMAL)
PHRASE: V inflects