comradeship
/ˈkɒmreɪdʃɪp/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈkɑːmrædʃɪp/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈkäm-ˌrad-ˌship -rəd-, especially British -ˌrād-/ (ame, mw)
comradeship — noun
1. a sense of closeness, trust, and mutual support that grows between people who sh
a sense of closeness, trust, and mutual support that grows between people who share a difficult task, a challenging experience, or a demanding work environment over time
The comradeship among the firefighting crew helped them stay calm during the dangerous rescue operation.
comradeship among [group]
Veterans often speak warmly about the comradeship they experienced during their military service.
speak warmly about comradeship
What Nora loved about the hiking club was the easy comradeship between all ages.
Building comradeship takes time, but Devika saw her team grow closer with each shared deadline.
Esteban and Soraya developed a deep comradeship during three years of working side by side.
- camaraderie
the most common synonym; same meaning but used more broadly for any friendly group atmosphere
- fellowship
more formal, often used in religious or academic contexts to describe shared purpose
- solidarity
emphasises unity and mutual support, especially in political or protest settings
- brotherhood
strong emotional bond with a family-like quality; sometimes excludes women in older usage
文法句型
comradeship + among/between [group]
用法筆記
Uncountable noun — it describes a quality or atmosphere within a group rather than a specific relationship between individuals.