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campaign
[ kam-peyn ]
noun
- the competition by rival political candidates and organizations for public office.
- a systematic course of aggressive activities for some specific purpose:
a sales campaign.
- Military.
- military operations for a specific objective.
- Obsolete. the military operations of an army in the field for one season.
- a story in a role-playing game, spread out over multiple play sessions, that usually keeps the same plot, setting, or main characters:
Last week we finished our campaign and I already miss it.
verb (used without object)
- to serve in or go on a campaign:
He planned to campaign for the candidate.
My daughter has been campaigning for a later curfew for months.
verb (used with object)
- to race (a horse, boat, car, etc.) in a number or series of competitions.
campaign
/ kæmˈpeɪn /
noun
- a series of coordinated activities, such as public speaking and demonstrating, designed to achieve a social, political, or commercial goal
a presidential campaign
an advertising campaign
- military a number of complementary operations aimed at achieving a single objective, usually constrained by time or geographic area
verb
- introften foll byfor to conduct, serve in, or go on a campaign
Derived Forms
- camˈpaigner, noun
Other Words From
- cam·paign·er noun
- coun·ter·cam·paign noun
- pre·cam·paign noun adjective
- re·cam·paign verb
- un·cam·paign·ing adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of campaign1
Example Sentences
At the time people were talking about him as a good bet for chief of staff but Trump chose his campaign manager Susie Wiles instead.
The inquiry has been considering the interview as part of a disinformation campaign from Russia - something Commander Murphy said had been seen previously, such as in the Litvinenko inquiry.
There will be no winter break in this campaign either - meaning clubs will be playing pretty much solidly until the first World Cup qualifiers - and next Nations League games - take place in March.
“The goal should be changing behavior,” says Jay Jordan, a longtime criminal justice reform activist who spent 7½ years in prison and advised the Proposition 6 campaign.
The Seattle entrepreneur, who also campaigned for Harris, said it grates on her to see people laughing in restaurants “as if nothing had happened.”
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