different between famously vs camously

famously

English

Etymology

From famous +? -ly.

Adverb

famously (comparative more famously, superlative most famously)

  1. (Can we add an example for this sense?) In a celebrated manner.
  2. Indicates that the act, state, or occurrence described by the sentence is famous.
    • 2007, Ian Harrison, Take Me to Your Leader, DK, ?ISBN, page 152 [1]:
      President Roosevelt famously said "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself."
    • 2009, Eric Slauter, The State as a Work of Art, Chicago, ?ISBN, page 247 [2]:
      But even as religion was on the rise, the word "God" declined dramatically over the course of the eighteenth century. The word is famously absent from the Constitution, but it was also relatively absent from the printed texts of the decade in which the Constitution was drafted and adopted, and more broadly from the revolutionary period overall.
  3. Really well, having great rapport
    The new roommates got on famously.

Synonyms

  • (indicates the sentence described something famous): notably, notoriously

famously From the web:

  • what famously unhinged woman are you
  • what famous happened in 1066
  • what famously mean
  • famously what does it mean
  • what franklin famously asked for
  • what franklin famously asked for nyt crossword
  • what musical famous
  • what musical famously featured the song


camously

English

Etymology

camous +? -ly

Adverb

camously (comparative more camously, superlative most camously)

  1. (obsolete) awry
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Skelton to this entry?)

camously From the web:

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