concentration camp
English
Etymology
From concentration + camp. In later use partly after German Konzentrationslager, itself a calque of the English term.
Noun
concentration camp (plural concentration camps)
- A camp where large numbers of people, especially political prisoners, prisoners of war, refugees etc., are detained for the purpose of confining them in one place, typically with inadequate or inhumane facilities. [from 19th c.]
- 1927, Charles E. Chapman, A History of the Cuban Republic, IV.81:
- All Cubans (men, women, and children) were ordered to move into garrisoned Spanish towns or concentration camps.
- 2015, The Guardian, 9 January:
- In 1945, overseen by Alfred Hitchcock, a crack team of British film-makers went to Germany to document the horror of the concentration camps.
- 1927, Charles E. Chapman, A History of the Cuban Republic, IV.81:
- (figuratively) A situation wherein crowding and extremely harsh conditions take place. [from 20th c.]
Translations
camp where large numbers of persons are detained
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See also
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