/ˈkampo/, [ˈkɑm.pʊ]
OriginFrom Old Galician-Portuguese campo, from Latin campus. Compare Portuguese and Spanish campo.
- masculinefield (open land area)
“1343, Cal Pardo, Enrique (ed.), Colección diplomática medieval do arquivo da catedral de Mondoñedo. Santiago: Consello da Cultura Galega, page 143” — the cemetery field of the church of this town of Ribadeo
- masculinemeadow, pasture
“Fernan Eanes, yrmao do mayordomo, veo a os canpos de Carraszedo et thomoulle LII ovellas et adussellas per Cedeyra”
- masculinefield
- masculinefield
“en meogo do escudo, en que tragía hũa agia d'ouro et o canpo uerde” — in the middle of the shield, where it had a golden eagle on green field
- masculinefield (region affected by a force)
- masculinefarmland
- masculineplaza
- masculinebattleground; battlefield
“Pois que el rrey Menõ fuj morto, os troiãos leixarõ o canpo” — after king Menon was dead the Trojans left the battleground
Formscampos(plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0