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[ UK /kˈɒmɹe‍ɪd/ ]
[ US /ˈkɑmˌɹæd/ ]
NOUN
  1. used as a term of address for those male persons engaged in the same movement
    Greetings, comrade!
  2. a friend who is frequently in the company of another
    drinking companions
    comrades in arms

How To Use comrade In A Sentence

  • Comrades however had the last say when Dean Gordon grabbed a consolation goal for them on the stroke of full time.
  • It is as good as the spirit of their comrades in munition factories in Great Britain. Defence of Liberty—There and Here
  • Fiji, were hailed by comrades for "excelling" in their roles after dying in separate incidents in Nad-e Ali on Tuesday. WalesOnline - Home
  • It's knockabout stuff aimed at sending the comrades back to their constituencies with a smile. Times, Sunday Times
  • Soldiers and chaplains who tried to force religion on their comrades thus often faced ostracism.
  • But they have to beware of spilling secrets in front of their old comrades.
  • -- - Here be two arblasts, comrades, with windlaces and quarrells The arblast was a cross-bow, the windlace the machine used in bending that weapon, and the quarrell, so called from its square or diamond-shaped head, was the bolt adapted to it. -- - to the barbican with you, and see you drive each bolt through a Saxon brain. Ivanhoe. A Romance
  • There is a particular comradeship because physical and mental strengths are tested in so many spheres. Times, Sunday Times
  • That's a real vote-winner, comrades. The Sun
  • He was a psychologist rather than a philosopher, and his interest and zest in life, in the relationships of simple people, the intermingling of personal emotions and happy comradeships, kept him from ever forming cynical or merely spectatorial views of humanity. Ionica
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