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camaraderie

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[ US /ˌkɑmɝˈɑdɝi/ ]
[ UK /kˌæməɹˈɑːdəɹˌi/ ]
NOUN
  1. the quality of affording easy familiarity and sociability

How To Use camaraderie In A Sentence

  • The sense of camaraderie was strong and uncontrived. Times, Sunday Times
  • I also agree that there's an incredible amount of camaraderie among fencers.
  • He hires all his unemployable comedy friends and we're supposed to chuckle along with their camaraderie, as though paying eight bucks makes us eligible to be in on the in-jokes.
  • While the children built up an atmosphere of camaraderie, the adults often feuded, competing for the profits of the deal.
  • So, with a strong sense of camaraderie and purpose, the French were ready and settled in preparation for the battles ahead.
  • Placing bets and calling bluffs, it's a way to blow off steam from a rigorous course schedule, a camaraderie they all share. Whatever Happened To ... Derek O'Dell, Virginia Tech shooting survivor
  • It was great sportsmanship and camaraderie and we are still friends. Times, Sunday Times
  • We shall not forget them, nor this magnificent production of a play that reminds us in our selfish age how collective responsibility and camaraderie have eroded away.
  • There's a high degree of trust, a very high degree of camaraderie and sense of purpose.
  • She philandered with some of them up to the point where comparisons become inevitable, and, so long as they met her in a spirit of frank camaraderie, it was agreeable enough; but when, with their commonplace minds, they presumed to be sentimental, they became intolerable. The Beth Book Being a Study of the Life of Elizabeth Caldwell Maclure, a Woman of Genius
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