kamerad

See also: Kamerad

English

Etymology

From German Kamerad (comrade), the word that a surrendering German soldier would call out.

Verb

kamerad (third-person singular simple present kamerads, present participle kamerading, simple past and past participle kameraded)

  1. (intransitive) To surrender, as a German in World War II.

Indonesian

Etymology

From Dutch kameraad, from French camarade, from Spanish camarada or Italian camerata, from Medieval Latin *camarata, from Latin camara, camera (a chamber). Doublet of kamar and kamera.

Pronunciation

  • (Standard Indonesian) IPA(key): /kaməˈrat/ [ka.məˈrat̪̚]
  • Rhymes: -at
  • Hyphenation: ka‧me‧rad

Noun

kamêrad (plural kamerad-kamerad)

  1. comrade (a mate, companion, or associate)
    Synonyms: kawan, kenalan, sahabat, sobat, teman
  2. (communism) comrade (a fellow socialist, communist or other similarly politically aligned person)
    1. a non-hierarchical title, functionally similar to "Mr.", "Mrs.", "Miss", "Ms." etc, in a communist or socialist state.

Alternative forms

Further reading