In Latin, camara or camera denoted a vaulted ceiling or roof. Later, the word simply mean “room, chamber” and was inherited by many European languages with that meaning. In the Spanish, the word became cámara, and a derivative of that was camarada “a group of soldiers quartered in a room” and hence “fellow soldier, companion.” That Spanish word was borrowed into French as camarade and then into Elizabethan English as both camerade and comerade.
He enjoys spending time with his old army comrades.
the boy, and two others who are known to be his comrades, are wanted for questioning by the police
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But the mass rebellion Brown predicted never materialized, leaving him and his comrades trapped inside the arsenal.—
Marissa J. Lang,
NPR,
26 June 2026 Jackass Forever was dedicated to Dunn and concluded with a moving tribute to their fallen comrade.—
Sezin Devi Koehler,
Entertainment Weekly,
26 June 2026 One of his book-hunting comrades was his longtime friend and fellow New York guitar visionary Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth.—
Rob Sheffield,
Rolling Stone,
24 June 2026 But Sharako simply pushed him overboard before ordering her men to throw Tyland's other armored comrades off as well.—
Bryan Alexander,
USA Today,
22 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for comrade
Word History
Etymology
Middle French camarade group sleeping in one room, roommate, companion, from Old Spanish camarada, from cámara room, from Late Latin camera, camara — more at chamber