campout

[kamp-out] /ˈkæmpˌaʊt/
noun
1.
a camping out of a group.
Also, camp-out.
Origin
1875-80, Americanism; noun use of verb phrase camp out

camp1

[kamp] /kæmp/
noun
1.
a place where an army or other group of persons or an individual is lodged in a tent or tents or other temporary means of shelter.
2.
such tents or shelters collectively:
The regiment transported its camp in trucks.
3.
the persons so sheltered:
The camp slept through the storm.
4.
the act of camping out:
Camp is far more pleasant in summer than in winter.
5.
any temporary structure, as a tent or cabin, used on an outing or vacation.
6.
a group of troops, workers, etc., camping and moving together.
7.
army life.
8.
a group of people favoring the same ideals, doctrines, etc.:
Most American voters are divided into two camps, Republicans and Democrats.
9.
any position in which ideals, doctrines, etc., are strongly entrenched:
After considering the other side's argument, he changed camps.
10.
a recreation area in the country, equipped with extensive facilities for sports.
11.
verb (used without object)
13.
to establish or pitch a camp:
The army camped in the valley.
14.
to live temporarily in or as if in a camp or outdoors, usually for recreation (often followed by out):
They camped by the stream for a week.
15.
to reside or lodge somewhere temporarily or irregularly, especially in an apartment, room, etc.:
They camped in our apartment whenever they came to town.
16.
to settle down securely and comfortably; become ensconced:
The kids camped on our porch until the rain stopped.
17.
to take up a position stubbornly:
They camped in front of the president's office.
verb (used with object)
18.
to put or station (troops) in a camp; shelter.
Origin
1520-30; < Middle French can, camp, orig. dial. (Normandy, Picardy) or < Old Provençal < Italian campo < Latin campus field; compare Old English campe, compe battle, battlefield (cognate with German Kampf struggle) < Germanic < Latin
British Dictionary definitions for camp out

camp1

/kæmp/
noun
1.
a place where tents, cabins, or other temporary structures are erected for the use of military troops, for training soldiers, etc
2.
the military life
3.
tents, cabins, etc, used as temporary lodgings by a group of travellers, holiday-makers, Scouts, etc
4.
the group of people living in such lodgings
5.
(South African) a field or paddock fenced off as pasture
6.
a group supporting a given doctrine or theory: the socialist camp
7.
(Austral) a place where sheep or cattle gather to rest
8.
(modifier) suitable for use in temporary quarters, on holiday, etc, esp by being portable and easy to set up: a camp bed, a camp chair
verb
9.
(intransitive) often foll by down. to establish or set up a camp
10.
(intransitive) often foll by out. to live temporarily in or as if in a tent
11.
(transitive) to put in a camp
Derived Forms
camping, noun
Word Origin
C16: from Old French, ultimately from Latin campus field

camp2

/kæmp/
adjective
1.
effeminate; affected in mannerisms, dress, etc
2.
homosexual
3.
consciously artificial, exaggerated, vulgar, or mannered; self-parodying, esp when in dubious taste
verb
4.
(transitive) to perform or invest with a camp quality
5.
camp it up
  1. to seek to focus attention on oneself by making an ostentatious display, overacting, etc
  2. to flaunt one's homosexuality
noun
6.
a camp quality, style, etc
Word Origin
C20: of uncertain origin

Camp

/kæmp/
noun
1.
Walter (Chauncey). 1859–1925, US sportsman and administrator; he introduced new rules to American football, which distinguished it from rugby.
Word Origin and History for camp out

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.

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.

v.

"to encamp," 1540s, from camp (n.). Related: Camped; camping.

camp out in Medicine

cAMP abbr.
cyclic AMP

Slang definitions & phrases for camp out

camp

adjective
  1. : a camp bar/ the camp scene
  2. : a camp advertisement/ camp clothing
noun
  1. A male homosexual (1940s+ Homosexuals)
  2. Effeminate behavior, such as mincing gait, fluttering gestures, or pronounced lisp (1920s+ Homosexuals)
  3. Something, esp in art, decoration, theater, etc, so naively stylized, artificial, affected, old-fashioned, and inadequate to good modern taste as to be highly amusing and inviting to parody: television's inexhaustible supply of crash courses in camp (1960s+)
verb
  1. (also camp it up): Malcolm was camping perilously in the blue-collar bar
  2. (also camp it up) To behave in a humorously affected, exaggerated way, esp imitating the acting and oratorical styles of the 1800s: She started camping, vamping me like Theda Bara (1960s+)
Related Terms

boot camp, high camp, low camp

[origin uncertain; perhaps, as noted in 1909, referring to a sense ''actions and gestures of exaggerated emphasis,'' it is fr French se camper, ''put oneself in a bold, provocative posture,'' attested fr the mid-1600s; the more modern senses were revived, introduced, and popularized in Susan Sontag's essay ''Notes on Camp,'' published in 1964]


Related Abbreviations for camp out

cAMP

cyclic adenosine monophosphate

CAMP

  1. continuous air monitoring program
  2. cyclophosphamide doxorubicin methotrexate procarbazine
camp out in the Bible

During their journeys across the wilderness, the twelve tribes formed encampments at the different places where they halted (Ex. 16:13; Num. 2:3). The diagram here given shows the position of the different tribes and the form of the encampment during the wanderings, according to Num. 1:53; 2:2-31; 3:29, 35, 38; 10:13-28. The area of the camp would be in all about 3 square miles. After the Hebrews entered Palestine, the camps then spoken of were exclusively warlike (Josh. 11:5, 7; Judg. 5:19, 21; 7:1; 1 Sam. 29:1; 30:9, etc.).

Idioms and Phrases with camp out

camp out

Sleep outdoors; also, stay somewhere for an unusually long time. For example, “We camped out in a field this night” (George Washington, Journal, March 18, 1748). In the early 1900s, the expression was extended to figurative uses, meaning simply “to stay somewhere for an unusually long time,” as in She camped out at the stage door, hoping for an autograph.
Encyclopedia Article for camp out

camp

in military service, an area for temporary or semipermanent sheltering of troops. In most usage the word camp signifies an installation more elaborate and durable than a bivouac but less so than a fort or billet

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