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ADJECTIVE
  1. demanding attention
    regarded literary questions as exigent and momentous
    clamant needs
    insistent hunger
    a crying need
    an instant need
  2. conspicuously and offensively loud; given to vehement outcry
    a vociferous mob
    strident demands
    a clamorous uproar
    strident demands
    blatant radios

How To Use clamant In A Sentence

  • It was that very same who at the hospital of Rovigo had looked at me so hard, had burnt my cheek with his hot breath and urged the value of his friendship so clamantly against that of the Jew's; Fra Palamone, as I remembered his name. The Fool Errant
  • She considered her cause to be so clamantly just that to expatiate to the Holy Father upon its merits would be an impertinence; it was not conceivable that He would fail her; and in any event, she had in hand a deal of sewing which required immediate attention. Chivalry
  • A great popular press in Britain protests clamantly every time an international conference is called for. Sir Norman Angell - Nobel Lecture
  • It seemed to John that they would never be otherwise than dirty-grey, that the streets would always be wet and the shops always clamantly vulgar. The Foolish Lovers
  • Here the exotic accents are presented but they emerge and play chase with a whole palette of cut-glass avant-garde paraphernalia - both clamantly violent and dreamily disengaged.
  • The pain of my swollen arm kept me awake until the second dawn: to the relief of my overburdened mind, for its body became clamant enough to interrupt my self-questioning when the fire of some such surface injury swept the sluggish nerves. Seven Pillars of Wisdom
  • Do not these terrible figures plead eloquently and clamantly for a revision and reform of our existing hospital system?
  • And then high up in the firmamental darkness we heard the clamant cries of some great, passing birds. Sixes and Sevens
  • Ita ergo clamant haec omnia, sanguis fratris, fides matris, destitutio miseri, et miseria destituti. back A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • Considerate persons found something of the pathetic in their preoccupation by these trifles while, so clamantly, the dissension between the young King and his uncles gathered to a head: the air was thick with portents; and was this, then, an appropriate time, the judicious demanded of high Heaven, for the Queen of fearful England to concern herself about a peasant's toothache? Chivalry
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