Noun
The state of being a comrade; intimate fellowship.
Source: Webster's dictionaryA sense of comradeship rather than political conviction led him, while still a student, to join the Kelmscott House Socialist Club in Hammersmith." Source: Internet
I love the social distancing and comradeship the motorcycle convoys represent and the Harley mystique and the motorcycle jacket with the club names. Source: Internet
It practices "criticism, self-criticism, and strict discipline" and pursues " collective leadership and individual responsibility, and promoting comradeship and solidarity in line with the Party's political programs and statutes." Source: Internet
But those paramilitary operations are rather more historically distant than Corbyn’s with the Irish Republican Army at the height of its bombing campaigns, or his habit (for which he recently ) of offering comradeship to Hezbollah and Hamas. Source: Internet
Bryn Mawr Specialty Camps are the place for young women to foster growing relationships with one another while always including the camp’s core values of loyalty, beauty, merit, and comradeship. Source: Internet
And it is in that context, where cooperation and comradeship gave rise to competition, that I believe that I was marginalized. Source: Internet