Search Result for "encamp": 
Wordnet 3.0

VERB (1)

1. live in or as if in a tent;
- Example: "Can we go camping again this summer?"
- Example: "The circus tented near the town"
- Example: "The houseguests had to camp in the living room"
[syn: camp, encamp, camp out, bivouac, tent]


The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

Encamp \En*camp"\, v. t. To form into a camp; to place in a temporary habitation, or quarters. [1913 Webster] Bid him encamp his soldiers. --Shak. [1913 Webster]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

Encamp \En*camp"\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Encamped (?; 215); p. pr. & vb. n. Encamping.] To form and occupy a camp; to prepare and settle in temporary habitations, as tents or huts; to halt on a march, pitch tents, or form huts, and remain for the night or for a longer time, as an army or a company traveling. [1913 Webster] The host of the Philistines encamped in the valley of Rephaim. --1 Chron. xi. 15. [1913 Webster]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):

encamp v 1: live in or as if in a tent; "Can we go camping again this summer?"; "The circus tented near the town"; "The houseguests had to camp in the living room" [syn: camp, encamp, camp out, bivouac, tent]
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary:

Encamp An encampment was the resting-place for a longer or shorter period of an army or company of travellers (Ex. 13:20; 14:19; Josh. 10:5; 11:5). The manner in which the Israelites encamped during their march through the wilderness is described in Num. 2 and 3. The order of the encampment (see CAMP) was preserved in the march (Num. 2:17), the signal for which was the blast of two silver trumpets. Detailed regulations affecting the camp for sanitary purposes are given (Lev. 4:11, 12; 6:11; 8:17; 10:4, 5; 13:46; 14:3; Num. 12:14, 15; 31:19; Deut. 23:10, 12). Criminals were executed without the camp (Lev. 4:12; comp. John 19:17, 20), and there also the young bullock for a sin-offering was burnt (Lev. 24:14; comp. Heb. 13:12). In the subsequent history of Israel frequent mention is made of their encampments in the time of war (Judg. 7:18; 1 Sam. 13:2, 3, 16, 23; 17:3; 29:1; 30:9, 24). The temple was sometimes called "the camp of the Lord" (2 Chr. 31:2, R.V.; comp. Ps. 78:28). The multitudes who flocked to David are styled "a great host (i.e., "camp;" Heb. mahaneh), like the host of God" (1 Chr. 12:22).