English

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From Middle English camus, from Middle French camus of like meaning, from Proto-Celtic *kambos (crooked, bent). Doublet of kam (crooked, awry).

Adjective

edit

camous (comparative more camous, superlative most camous)

  1. (said of the nose, obsolete after the 19th century) flat; depressed; crooked

Anagrams

edit