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Camus

[ US /ˈkæmɪs/ ]
NOUN
  1. French writer who portrayed the human condition as isolated in an absurd world (1913-1960)

How To Use Camus In A Sentence

  • We think this kind of information would be helpful to a viewer although not for the same reason Camus did.
  • Nihil ergo aliud restat, quam ut dicamus Europam esse irregulare aliquod Conventus et monstro simile ... A Short History Of Empire (I Hope)
  • All healthy men have thought of their own suicide. Albert Camus 
  • Even the simplest language of novels - in Hemingway, for example, or Camus - signifies by indirection a relation to literature and to the world.
  • Camus is considered to be one of the twentieth century's literary giants.
  • Man is the only creature who refuses to be what he is. Albert Camus 
  • I saw Camus's death in a 1960 car accident as further confirmation that la vie est absolument absurde. David Finkle: Writing Under the Influence, Living Under the Influence
  • There are crimes of passion and crimes of logic. The boundary between them is not clearly defined. Albert Camus 
  • Si forasse nostri legati in eadem sinodo contra apostolicam preceptionem egerint, nos nec recipimus nec iudicamus alicuius existere firmitatis. Archive 2007-05-01
  • The "Gloria in excelsis" and the Nicene Creed are sung, the vestments are white, and “Ita, missa est” is said at the end, rather than the older formula “Benedicamus Domino”, all characteristics of feast days. Compendium of the 1955 Holy Week Revisions of Pius XII: Part 8 - The Hours of the Celebration of the Holy Week Liturgies
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