What's the difference between comradeship and friendship?

Comradeship


Definition:

  • (n.) The state of being a comrade; intimate fellowship.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) I want to thank my colleagues all for their support and comradeship, along with all those others that I have served with in 37 years as an officer.” Speaking in April, he described Acpo’s relationship with the current government as “robust”.
  • (2) By 1960, she had reached her third, Doctor In Love, followed by Doctor In Clover, both with Leslie Phillips, a more refined leading man than the bucolic Sid James, but the Doctor films satisfied her less than the Carry Ons, which she said gave her a unique comradeship and fun during shooting.
  • (3) I have never felt much professional comradeship with people hired to promote the self-serving views of a few eccentric far-right billionaires controlling large parts of the British press.
  • (4) They had been sustained and inspired by their feeling of comradeship, and their sense of responsibility for their fellow man and woman.
  • (5) But despite this apparent comradeship, Michel is not above threatening Smith.
  • (6) Unlike the glorious sports of basketball, American football and baseball, she says, all individual talent is subsumed into the back-patting, winning-isn't-everything comradeship of football.
  • (7) The banter, the comradeship, everything about the show.
  • (8) But he said that the practice, known as "the magic roundabout", was an exercise in comradeship.
  • (9) You could find the same thing in Homer.” Soldiering is timeless and Motion’s response treads across scarred ground: the futility of war; the majesty of the battlefield; the preciousness of everyday life; the relief of taking a swim after combat in temperatures of 95F in full body armour; the urge to bear witness; and the eternal solace of comradeship.
  • (10) They will also test the truth of the comparisons made on the president’s website : “Due to his [Kiir’s] close comradeship with the late Dr Garang, he is perceived as the embodiment and assurance of the future of the peace agreement spearheaded by the fallen hero.
  • (11) In conclusion, sport for the handicapped should achieve the following: give pleasure of life, increase courage, promote comradeship, reinforce self-confidence, improve independence, and take away inhibitions and inferiority complexes.
  • (12) Although, in 1969, one black lieutenant commented somewhat cynically that the "threat of death changes many things, but comradeship doesn't last after you get back to the village", the disparity in inter-racial hatred at the rear army bases and in the war theatre itself was immense.
  • (13) The mix of adventure and rebellion, victory and comradeship was intoxicating.
  • (14) A sense of comradeship exists within such groups and troop morale is frequently facilitated by their existence.
  • (15) The sense of people going on an adventure, working together, doing something nobody’s done before, with a sense of comradeship and working together – that spirit doesn’t exist now.
  • (16) The comradeship between former chancellor Gerhard Schröder and Vladimir Putin during the latter's first stint as president wasn't welcomed by everyone.
  • (17) Her son had liked the routine and comradeship of the army.
  • (18) So, in a spirit of comradeship and unity, I call on the CLPD to withdraw their conference motion on this.
  • (19) Or how much human comradeship survived long into the war, regardless of nationality: Harry was always careful to shoot his enemy in the legs "and no higher" unless he thought his life was in danger.
  • (20) One opponent, the late Gen Sir Anthony Farrar-Hockley, writing on the BBC website, repeated that gay people could undermine comradeship and added that two surveys had shown the overwhelming majority of those in military service found homosexuality “abhorrent ”.

Friendship


Definition:

  • (n.) The state of being friends; friendly relation, or attachment, to a person, or between persons; affection arising from mutual esteem and good will; friendliness; amity; good will.
  • (n.) Kindly aid; help; assistance,
  • (n.) Aptness to unite; conformity; affinity; harmony; correspondence.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Maybe in some senses this is the new face of friendship.
  • (2) Self- and friend ratings of friendship intimacy were gathered using a 2-step procedure ensuring that students rated only reciprocated friendships.
  • (3) Photograph: Sophia Evans for the Observer REGISTERED, SUPPORTS REMAIN Hannah Capstick, 22 Studying for a graduate diploma in law, Leeds Among my friendship group, people didn’t vote in the local elections.
  • (4) Even in their final days, they thrive on friendship and community.
  • (5) Stone’s own complicated relationship with the truth stretches back decades, running parallel to his friendship with Trump.
  • (6) It is hoped that more expert advices and friendship will come from IPA, WHO, UNICEF, and some member countries.
  • (7) My act of conscience began with a statement: "I don't want to live in a world where everything that I say, everything I do, everyone I talk to, every expression of creativity or love or friendship is recorded.
  • (8) Maybe this is symptomatic of how the possibilities of social media have just made our friendships shallower, an economy of “likes” and thoughtless “adds”.
  • (9) Shrewsbury and University College also cemented a lifelong friendship with Richard Ingrams, one of the founders and editors of Private Eye, for which Foot was to do some of his finest work, cushioning attacks on the scandalous nature of Ingrams' organ with corruption exposed by the "serious side".
  • (10) Peter Jay, who founded TV-am alongside Frost, told BBC News: "On the screen he was a very talented and original performer, but it was his talent off-screen, his quality as a human being, his capacity for friendship and loyalty, that were in my opinion the thing that raised him to quite an exceptional level."
  • (11) I have no doubt that these friendships, forged in adversity and pizza, will be patched up.
  • (12) Straight talk – and total frankness – is essential to our friendship."
  • (13) It was at this time that Milosevic forged a close friendship with Stambolic, scion of an elite communist family.
  • (14) More than anything, I started to feel that I was calling my friends less, seeing my friends less and that our friendships were being reduced to a trickle of pictures, comments and quips.
  • (15) The gates may be open but the road to the church that calls itself a friendship and reconciliation centre is not paved with sleek cars or thronged with believers.
  • (16) The novel examines determinism and free will, as well the power of love and friendship.
  • (17) Friendship and sex of others had significant main and interaction effects.
  • (18) Their friendship goes back to Park’s days as acting first lady following the assassination of her mother.
  • (19) The fact that true friendship really can exist in the Big Brother house was heartening.
  • (20) In June, just as Friendship was being published in the US, a blowhard critic named Edward Champion took her to task in an 11,000-word blog post titled “Emily Gould, Literary Narcissism, and the Middling Millennials” , in which his principal beef appeared to be that Gould was a woman and not James Baldwin.

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