As nouns the difference between campuses and grounds
is that campuses is while grounds is (legal) basis or justification for something, as in "grounds for divorce" or grounds can be (plural only) the sediment at the bottom of a liquid, or from which a liquid has been filtered (as in coffee grounds).
As a verb campuses
is (campus).
campuses
English
Noun
(head)
Verb
(head)
(campus)
grounds
English
Etymology 1
From
Noun
(grounds)
(legal) Basis or justification for something, as in "grounds for divorce."
The collective land areas that compose a larger area, as in the castle grounds.
Derived terms
* groundskeeper
* stomping grounds
Etymology 2
From (ground), past participle of (term)
Noun
(head)
(plural only) The sediment at the bottom of a liquid, or from which a liquid has been filtered (as in coffee grounds).
Anagrams
*