Campi vs Campus - What's the difference?
campi | campus |
(nonstandard) (campus)
* 1894 : Stanford University, The Stanford Quad: Being the Year Book of the Junior Class of … Stanford University , p119
* 2003 : John B. Bear, Ph.D. & Mariah P. Bear, M.A., Bears’ Guide to College Degrees by Mail & Internet: 100 Accredited Schools That Offer Bachelor’s, Master’s, Doctorates, and Law Degrees by Distance Learning , p94
* 2004 : Ahmed Karmouch et alii, Mobility Aware Technologies and Applications: First International Workshop, MATA 2004, Florianopólis, Brazil, October 2004 Proceedings , p37
The grounds or property of a school, college, university, business, church, or hospital, often understood to include buildings and other structures.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-08-24, volume=408, issue=8850, magazine=(The Economist), author=Schumpeter
, title= An institution of higher education and its ambiance.
To confine to campus as a punishment.
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Campus is a related term of campi.
As nouns the difference between campi and campus
is that campi is irregular plural of campus while campus is the grounds or property of a school, college, university, business, church, or hospital, often understood to include buildings and other structures.As a verb campus is
to confine to campus as a punishment.campi
English
Noun
(head)- Economics major Bob Shatzen, one of two assistant financial managers, is responsible for Wilbur and Stern Halls, Freshman women, and foreign campi .
- Master of Liberal Studies students complete the program by attending a total of three ten-day seminars on campi and by finishing…
- …high-speed wireless communication is now available in many locations such as corporate offices, factories, shopping malls, university campi ,…
References
* Merriam-Webster online, American Heritage (via answers.com), MSN Encarta, Oxford English Dictionary (askoxford.com), all have no entry for campi , M-W and Oxford English Dictionary show plural of campus as campuses. ----campus
English
Noun
(es)Mr Geek goes to Washington, passage=From their corporate campuses on the west coast, America’s technology entrepreneurs used to ignore faraway Washington, DC—or mention the place only to chastise it for holding back innovation with excessive regulation. They have, at times, invested in the low politics of self-interested lobbying […]. Yet unlike Wall Street
