camp


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a foot in both camps

Some involvement with or support for two opposing sides. When my friends split up, I felt like I had a foot in both camps. I've worked with both teams, and I think they both have good ideas, so to be honest I have a foot in both camps. You're either our ally or our enemy—you can't have a foot in both camps!
See also: both, camp, foot

boot camp

1. A camp where military recruits are rigorously trained in combat, physical fitness, military drills, etc. The military always sounded like a romantic career, but boot camp nearly killed me! She got through boot camp like a champ, so any concerns I had about her pursuing a career the military are gone now. You'll hate boot camp, but it will get you in the best shape of your life.
2. A training camp for juvenile offenders or troublesome adolescents modeled after military basic training, meant to instill socially acceptable values and behaviors through rigorous disciplinary, physical, and psychological exercises. Our son was out of control for several years, but after he came back from boot camp, it was like he was a whole new person. If Bobby keeps getting arrested like this, you need to send him to a prison boot camp and scare him straight. I never thought that troublemaker would make something of herself, but she's in college now. It seems that boot camp helped her turn her life around.
3. Any training camp or course that teaches by means of an intensive and immersive environment. I hear that the computer programming boot camp is full-on, but that you'll come away from it with comprehensive skills in the field. Work is sending me to a three-day copywriting boot camp, and I am not looking forward to it. I could use a Photoshop boot camp. I just never seem to know what I'm doing!
See also: boot, camp

break camp

To pack up one's belongings and leave a campsite. We need to break camp and head back to town before nightfall. Don't mind Rosalie, she's ready to break camp every time she hears a noise outside the tent. A: "Are you guys ready to break camp?" B: "Yeah, we need to be up early tomorrow."
See also: break, camp

camp

1. noun Something that is garish, over the top, and, often, outdated, usually humorously so. Sure, the play is just pure camp, but it's quite a romp. The show was total camp and also exactly what I needed after a long week at work. Those bodice-rippers from the '70s are nothing but camp. They'll rot your brain!
2. adjective Exaggerated, racy, or tacky. I know your character is supposed to provide comic relief, but you don't have to add quite so much camp humor. Uh, don't you think that a sequined minidress is a bit too camp for such a formal occasion? That play was way too camp for Grandma—we shouldn't have brought her.
3. adjective Relating to homosexuality. I highly doubt that every man who behaves in that camp manner is gay. Jeff may camp it up after a few drinks, but don't get too excited—he does have a wife, you know.

camp candlestick

obsolete
1. An empty bottle, due to its use as a candlestick in army camps. We found him passed out among myriad camp candlesticks. Clearly, the guys were drinking tonight—look at all these camp candlesticks. Come on, help me! We've got to get rid of all these camp candlesticks before the everyone else gets back.
2. A bayonet. He strapped his knife to his rifle as a sort of makeshift camp candlestick. If you weren't killed by the gunfire, chances were good you'd end up getting run through with a camp candlestick. These civilians, they're armed too. They've fashioned camp candlesticks and wouldn't hesitate to gore any of one us with them.
See also: camp, candlestick

camp follower

1. A civilian who follows a military unit from one location to the next, either because the person is closely related to a service member or to unofficially provide goods or services to members of the unit. Daniel spent his childhood as a camp follower. His father was in the army, so he and his mother had to move a lot. I used to work as a camp follower, traveling around and selling goods to military units. Look out for camp followers, boys. Those ladies are always looking for a military man to take to bed.
2. A person who supports a group or cause without officially belonging to its organization. I always vote Republican, but I'm a camp follower—I'm registered as an Independent. I'm somewhat of a camp follower, and I do donate to their cause from time to time. Only the diehards come to the monthly meetings, not the camp followers.
See also: camp, follower

camp it up

1. To act in a campy (exaggerated, racy, or tacky) manner, often in a theatrical setting. I know your character is supposed to add comic relief, but you don't have to camp it up that much. Come on, drag queens are supposed to camp it up! The more, the better! If you keep camping it up like that in auditions, you'll never get hired in Hollywood.
2. To act in an overly effeminate manner, as of a gay man. I highly doubt that every man who camps it up is gay. Jeff may camp it up after a few drinks, but don't get too excited—he does have a wife, you know.
See also: camp, up

camp out

1. To sleep outside recreationally; to camp, typically with a sleeping bag and tent. My little brother really wants to camp out for his birthday, so we're going to set up a tent in our back yard for him. I love hiking and camping out, but my boyfriend is not very outdoorsy. I have no interest in camping out, honestly. I'd much rather stay in a hotel.
2. To live in a place other than one home's temporarily, often in conditions that are not ideal. I'm camping out in my aunt's basement until I can move into my new apartment, so my roommates right now are a washer and dryer—and a few bugs. You're welcome to camp out in our attic for a few days while they fumigate your apartment. There was a gap between when my old lease was up and my new one started, so I had to camp out at my grandmother's for a bit.
See also: camp, out

camp out on (one's) doorstep

To station oneself temporarily in front of one's house. Usually used in reference to paparazzi or members of the media. News outlets have been camping out on our doorstep for the last three days after police named us as suspects in the case. Following the huge success of the film, the actress has had paparazzi camped out on her doorstep trying to get pictures of her and her family. Even if you camped out on the senator's doorstep, I doubt you'd be able to change his mind on this issue.
See also: camp, doorstep, on, out

have a foot in both camps

To have some involvement with or support for two opposing sides. When my friends split up, I felt like I had a foot in both camps. I've worked with both teams, and I think they both have good ideas, so to be honest I have a foot in both camps.
See also: both, camp, foot, have

in the boondocks

In a very distant or remote location, often one that lacks modern amenities. "Boondocks" comes from the Tagalog word bundok, meaning "mountain," and originated as US military slang. That place is all the way out in the boondocks—it'll take us hours to get there. Good luck getting a cell signal out here in the boondocks. I got tired of living in the boondocks, so I started renting an apartment right in the heart of the city.
See also: boondocks

keep a foot in both camps

To maintain involvement with or support for two opposing sides. When my friends split up, I felt like I had to keep a foot in both camps. I've worked with both teams, and I think they both have good ideas. I'd rather keep a foot in both camps than have to pick one over the other.
See also: both, camp, foot, keep

pitch camp

1. Literally, to set up everything one needs for a functioning campsite. This looks like a good spot to pitch camp. We'd better start pitching camp soon or we'll be doing it in the dark!
2. By extension, to settle into an area in which one plans to reside for a period of time. They pitched camp outside of the arena nearly 12 hours early to make sure they got great seats for the concert. The paparazzi have pitched camp outside of the actor's home, hoping to get pictures of his private life.
See also: camp, pitch

sleepaway camp

A location away from parents, typically in a rural area, where children, adolescents, or teenagers sleep overnight and then engage in various recreations during the day. We always send the kids to a sleepaway camp for a couple weeks during the summer. They love doing archery and horseback riding—and getting a break from us!
See also: camp
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2024 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.

break camp

to close down a campsite; to pack up and move on. Early this morning we broke camp and moved on northward. Okay, everyone. It's time to break camp. Take those tents down and fold them neatly.
See also: break, camp

camp it up

[for performers] to overact or behave in an affected manner. The cast began to camp it up in the second act, and the critics walked out. (Fixed order.) There is no need to camp it up. Play it the way it was written.
See also: camp, up

camp out

to live out of doors temporarily in a tent or camping vehicle, as on a vacation or special camping trip. I love to camp out in the winter.
See also: camp, out

*foot in both camps

Fig. an interest in or to support each of two opposing groups of people. (*Typically: get ~; have ~; give someone ~.) The shop steward had been promised a promotion and so had a foot in both camps during the strike—workers and management. Mr. Smith has a foot in both camps in the parent-teacher dispute. He teaches math, but he has a son at the school.
See also: both, camp, foot

*in the boondocks

 and *in the boonies
in a rural area; far away from a city or population. (*Typically: be ~; camp ~; live ~; stay ~.) Perry lives out in the boonies with his parents.
See also: boondocks

pitch camp

to set up or arrange a campsite. We pitched camp near the stream. Two campers went ahead of us to pitch camp while it was still light.
See also: camp, pitch
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

break camp

Take down a tent and pack up other gear; also, leave a place, move out. For example, The landlord has to return my rent deposit before I'll break camp. Originally camp denoted a military encampment, but by the mid-1500s the term had been transferred to temporary outdoor sites used by hunters and the like. By the 19th century, the current term was in use. Thus, "It is the hunter's rule to see that the fire is extinguished ... before breaking camp." (F.H. Guillemard, Cruise of Marchesa I, 1886).
See also: break, camp

camp follower

1. A civilian who follows or settles near a military camp, especially a prostitute who does so. For example, The recruits were told not to associate with camp followers. [Early 1800s]
2. A person who sympathizes with a cause or group but does not join it. For example, She's only a camp follower so we can't count on her for a contribution.
See also: camp, follower

camp it up

Make an extravagant, affected, or vulgar display, as in Amateur actors often camp it up, trying to be more dramatic. Originating in the 1950s as slang for flamboyant behavior stereotypically associated with gay men, this term began to be used more loosely by about 1970. Also see ham it up.
See also: camp, up

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.
See also: camp, out

foot in both camps, have a

Support or have good relations with two opposing sides. For example, He had a foot in both camps, making donations to candidates in both parties. In this expression camp alludes to encampments of enemy troops in a battle. [First half of 1900s]
See also: both, foot, have
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer. Copyright © 2003, 1997 by The Christine Ammer 1992 Trust. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

a camp follower

You call someone a camp follower when they follow or spend time with a particular person or group, either because they admire or support them, or because they hope to gain advantages from them. Brecht was surrounded by `camp-followers' — crowds of women who seemed to adore him. Even in my day as a player, we had our camp followers. Note: This expression is often used to show disapproval. Note: Originally, camp followers were civilians who travelled with an army and who made their living selling goods or services to the soldiers.
See also: camp, follower

pitch camp

If someone pitches camp, they settle somewhere for a period. As the scandal broke, reporters pitched camp outside the family home in Faversham.
See also: camp, pitch

a foot in both camps

If someone has a foot in both camps, they support or belong to two different groups, often groups with different aims or opinions. With an Indian father and an English mother, she had a foot in both camps — or perhaps in neither. Note: You can also say that someone has a foot in each camp or one foot in each camp. Sagdeev is trying to promote a compromise because he has one foot in each camp. Note: In this expression, a camp is a place where an army has put up its tents during part of a war or battle.
See also: both, camp, foot
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed. © HarperCollins Publishers 2012

have a foot in both camps

have an interest or stake in two parties or sides without commitment to either.
1992 Community Care As EWOs [Education Welfare Officers] we have a foot in both camps. We work with the children and their families and the school and bring the two together.
See also: both, camp, foot, have
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary © Farlex 2017

have a foot in both ˈcamps

(informal) be involved with two separate groups, etc. that have different ideas: She works in industry and at a university, so she’s got a foot in both camps.
See also: both, camp, foot, have
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary © Farlex 2017

camp out

v.
1. To sleep outdoors, usually in a tent: If the weather is nice, we should camp out on the mountain.
2. To reside at some place temporarily, especially under difficult conditions: I had to camp out in my cousin's living room until I found an apartment of my own.
See also: camp, out
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs. Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

camp

1. n. something cute and out of fashion; something of such an anachronistic style as to be intriguing. Nobody really knows what style camp really is, and very few even care.
2. and campy mod. overdone; out of fashion and intriguing. Most camp entertainment is pretentious and overdrawn.
3. mod. having to do with homosexual persons and matters. She is so camp, I could scream!

camp it up

1. tv. to overact. Can you make it a little more lively without camping it up?
2. tv. to overdo effeminacy; [for a homosexual male] to act too effeminate in public. John just loves to burst into the most sedate hotel in town and camp it up in the lobby.
See also: camp, up
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

break camp

To pack up equipment and leave a campsite.
See also: break, camp
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

boot camp

A training camp involving rigorous exercise. The term is based on the training camp for recruits in the armed services, the new recruits being called “boots,” a name dating from World War I. The transfers of this name include a vigorous exercise program for women established by sports clubs, and a full-immersion boot camp to train actors for war movies, Warriors, Inc., established in 1984 by a retired Marine Corps captain, Dale Dye, who served in Vietnam. The term is on its way to clichédom.
See also: boot, camp

camp follower

One who follows a group without being part of it. The practice originated with the families of recruits, prostitutes, and traveling merchants, who would settle near a military encampment. Later it was extended to others who benefited from military installations. The term itself may come from a letter written by the duke of Wellington in 1810. In mid-twentieth-century America the camp followers of rock musicians and other entertainers, mostly young women who followed their idols on tour, acquired the name groupie, which then was extended to any ardent fan.
See also: camp, follower
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer Copyright © 2013 by Christine Ammer
See also:
References in classic literature ?
"I go now to give the order for the breaking of camp early on the morrow," and he rose to leave the tent.
The evening following her interview with Mohammed Beyd, Jane Clayton sat for some time at the opening of her tent watching the rough activities of the camp. She had eaten the meal that had been brought her by Mohammed Beyd's Negro slave--a meal of cassava cakes and a nondescript stew in which a new-killed monkey, a couple of squirrels and the remains of a zebra, slain the previous day, were impartially and unsavorily combined; but the one-time Baltimore belle had long since submerged in the stern battle for existence, an estheticism which formerly revolted at much slighter provocation.
Also, they were to have assistance in capturing the woman, or rather women, for when Momulla had learned that there was a black woman in the other camp he had insisted that she be brought along as well as the white woman.
As Kai Shang and Momulla entered their camp, it was with a realization that they no longer needed Gust.
Now they all turn and come into the camp together."
All day long the sound of revelry and of rejoicing from the crowded camp swelled up to the ears of the Englishmen, and they could see the soldiers of the two nations throwing themselves into each other's arms and dancing hand-in-hand round the blazing fires.
"Sir William," said he, "it is my intention to attempt a small deed, and I ask you therefore that you will lead this outfall upon the camp. For me, I will ride into their camp with my squire and two archers.
So many small parties of French and Spanish horse were sweeping hither and thither that the small band attracted little notice, and making its way at a gentle trot across the plain, they came as far as the camp without challenge or hindrance.
The senseless body was thrown across the spare horse, the four sprang to their saddles, and away they thundered with loose reins and busy spurs through the swarming camp.
But confusion and disorder still reigned among the Spaniards for Sir William Felton and his men had swept through half their camp, leaving a long litter of the dead and the dying to mark their course.
"Nay, nay, the camp is in arms, and it would be rank madness.
"Young people who attend camp have called it a life-changing experience," says Judy Yu, YES associate director of youth services.
Only one of the camps intentionally taught families about the principles their camp was based on.
Acquania Gibbs of Clarkston, Georgia, says her curiosity was piqued when she received an e-mail newsletter from Dollar Divas (www.dollardiva.com), a Website for young women, highlighting a financial camp for girls ages 13 to 21 called Summer Stock.
Since time spent at camp can have a profound effect on your child, it's important to know what kind of summer your child visualizes, and then let him/her have a hand in the decision-making.