Campus vs Camous - What's the difference?
campus | camous |
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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As a noun campus
is campus (of an educational institution, etc).As an adjective camous is
(obsolete|of the nose) flat; depressed; crooked.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