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How To Use Clamor In A Sentence

  • Both men are from Brooklyn, both have children named Satchel, both are basketball fans, devout Knicks supporters, and both have made the clamorous city of New York their sound stage.
  • In fact, students clamor for the courses - admittedly, more loudly in some regions of the country than others.
  • In the 16th and 17th centuries, the cries turned still more colourful and clamorous, as a kind of auditory arms race developed between the vendors.
  • You killed him you killed him you... Through the clamor, I tried to think. SILENT JOE
  • Such preoccupations rarely seem to have troubled the solitary beings who inhabit the clamorous pages of her witty, erudite and anecdotal - if inconclusive - study.
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  • In any case, public clamor for inoculations might require a liberal vaccination program after an outbreak.
  • The thing is reduced to a cruel mockery when stores and granaries are over-gorged, while people clamor in vain for clothing and food, and drop dead within reach of these prime elements of warmth and sustentation. Black and White
  • The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be lead to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.
  • Upon opening the door, the clatter of trays on silverware and the clamor of voices competing with one another washed over them.
  • Clinton the elder here withdrew, and had scarcely disappeared when two voices were heard in the hall, in a kind of clamorous remonstrance with each other, which voices were those of Father Magowan and our friend The Emigrants Of Ahadarra The Works of William Carleton, Volume Two
  • At the same time, many contemporary Episcopal congregations clamor for more and more in-depth adult - education offerings.
  • He looked at it suspiciously, and as he grabbed for it, the thunder only began to clamor loudly, sending more rain to beat down on the mansion.
  • After $2,000,000 had been "expended," the clamor of the stockholders caused the company actually to build several furnaces. Frenzied Finance Vol. 1: The Crime of Amalgamated
  • Drove down to the city center in the early afternoon and found a bar in which the lunchtime trade was brisk but not clamorous. THE HELLBOUND HEART
  • I lowered my head just to hide the snort that clamored to get out.
  • Suddenly, and with appalling quickness the mastodonic brute reared itself on its mighty hind legs and elongated its neck and body in an effort to reach this vociferous pigmy whose clamor was disturbing the primeval silence of its horrible realm. The Conquering Sword Of Conan
  • The clamor of controversy sometimes provoked the emperor to exclaim, “Hear me! the Franks have heard me, and the Alemanni;” but he soon discovered that he was now engaged with more obstinate and implacable enemies; and though he exerted the powers of oratory to persuade them to live in concord, or at least in peace, he was perfectly satisfied, before he dismissed them from his presence, that he had nothing to dread from the union of the Christians. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • In his pocket was precisely the room - rent for the following week, the advance payment of which was already three days overdue and clamorously demanded by the hard - faced landlady. CHAPTER XVII
  • What has made the tension between press and government especially "clamorous" is that people in charge of the Bush White House decided on a strategy for rolling back the national press. Jay Rosen: "We are Covering the War on Terror, It's a Classified War."
  • Then, when hunger made them desire to go on with the repast, finding there was nought upon the table, they called clamorously for the cook. The Canterbury Puzzles And Other Curious Problems
  • When the dinner hour arrives, he bangs about as clamorously as possible, crashing the door into the coatrack, simulating a coughing fit on his way out, all to ensure that Eileen across the hall hears him leaving for his supposed dinner plans, although no such plans exist. 'The Imperfectionists'
  • But underneath all the clamor and the noise, a single heart beats.
  • But to me the most frightening aspect of the whole disaster was that the clamorous Tasman Sea went suddenly quiet - eerily so - and though I waited for its comforting roar to resume, I can't remember ever hearing it so noisy again.
  • The Premiership had a weekly global TV audience of 78 million last season, with broadcasters such as the Fox Soccer Channel in the U.S. and pccw in Hong Kong clamoring for a piece of the action.
  • Sonorous snores cut through the clamor of the gathering.
  • Aurora responded, also yelling over the clamor.
  • At length this cry became a clamor that shook even the old viceroyal palace in Mexico; while in San Antonio it gave a certain pitch to all conversation, and made men wear their cloaks, and set their beavers, and display their arms, with that demonstrative air of independence they called los Americano. Remember the Alamo
  • There was music and the sound of chatter in the background, the clamor of a dinner party in progress.
  • It was wildly dispiriting, yes, but as policy it was actually effective in stanching a financial meltdown - you only have to look to Europe where the clamoring for a similar program grows louder every day their current mess deepens. Benj Hewitt: A Liberal Defends Obama
  • clamorsome’ (all these still surviving in the North), ‘playsome’ English Past and Present
  • The first advance of the little army of the elect reawakened their rage; they grasped their arms, and waited but their leader's signal to commence the attack, when the clear tones of Adrian's voice were heard, commanding them to fall back; with confused murmur and hurried retreat, as the wave ebbs clamorously from the sands it lately covered, our friends obeyed. III.4
  • They need to speak so loudly that they drown out those who clamor for war.
  • It was babbling loudly, clamoring to tell her about every fish swimming in its depths and about any animal that happened to drink its water.
  • Everyone knows baby boomers will strain future budgets, yet there's no clamor for corrective policies.
  • And it's certainly true that ski- and tourism-related business owners in ski towns often clamor for more development, more marketing, more lifts and snowmaking and terrain.
  • Entirely new publications came into being to satisfy the insatiable demands of people clamoring for historical truth.
  • On the other side of the window, lightning pitchforked down through the sky and thunder clamored like it was stomping on the roof. Crescendo
  • Taiwanese financial firms clamoring to enter China's fast __ growing market.
  • And, say industry executives, as buyers clamor for more ‘car-like’ trucks and SUVs, the pressure is increasing to transfer more light-duty trucks to unitized structures, as well.
  • The voice of the sea is seductive, never ceasing, whispering, clamoring, murmuring, inviting the soul to wander n abysses of solitude.
  • While people were clamoring over the young couple, they seemed an odd match.
  • I can't imagine there was much clamor for failed television pilots from the buying public.
  • For all of you folking clamoring over recounts, isn't the purpose of electronic voting machines to avoid such a thing? Tim Hugo's Future Chaos
  • I shall leave a name execrated by every monopolist who, from less honorable motives, clamors for protection because it conduces to his own individual benefit. Ten Englishmen of the Nineteenth Century
  • The calls for them to scrunch their locks is nonetheless clamorous, due to the sheer success of the scheme. A Good Time Beats A Long Time
  • After it received a critical and financial walloping upon its release, was anyone clamoring for a new, extras-laden director's cut of Elektra?
  • Deinde, ubi propius ventum est, utrimque magno clamore concurritur. C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino
  • He was hard at work on his magnum opus: a painting, six feet tall, of the Savior's slaughter on the cross, a feral Pollockian image simultaneously repelling and exhilarating; the colors clamored in crimsons and yellows, blacks and speckled, blue blots.
  • The clamorous ticktock, ticktock of his watch would have put any self-respecting alarm clock to shame. THE LONELY SEA
  • Aber Cuawg, singing 'clamorously' to the sick man: 'there are that hear them that will not hear them again!' the sound of the large wave grating sullenly on the pebbles, -- Figures of Several Centuries
  • In this country women are clamoring for improvements in the sexual equality laws.
  • We stare back in distress, pondering the prospect of spending the better part of two hours at a clamorous pre-teen boys' party.
  • One reason is that our image of her art is so bound up with its first clamorous appearance.
  • Then there was a clamorous demand for “wharfage,” and the hackman charged half a dollar for taking me a quarter of a mile. The Englishwoman in America
  • Has one kind to clamor, after things quiet down, can let the lonely sublimation?
  • The river thundered below like a chorus of goblin voices, clamoring to snatch me away and bury me beneath the tumult of ice and rock, where no one would ever find me.
  • In June he complained to Robinson that people owed money by the regiment had “grown very clamorous” and might sue if the next appropriation was insufficient and went to pay the troops instead of civilian vendors. George Washington’s First War
  • It was a Rosetta stone that I would continually go back to when multiple issues from disparate groups clamored for priority.
  • Brett Huston , a vice president of human resources at Spectra Logic Corp. of Boulder, Colo., says older employees have been " clamoring " for ways to protect their s avings since the market meltdown of 2008. New 401(k) Safety Strategies
  • In the clamor of a battle, such noises and their exact location would be virtually impossible to distinguish even at close range.
  • She intended to put the money back, but, distantly, she heard shouts and clamoring.
  • His demands for republication, for objective critical recognition, became clamorous. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Quum audisset Esau verba patris sui, clamavit clamore magno, et amaro valde valde, dixitque patri suo, Benedic mihi: etiam ego filius tuus sum, pater mi. Commentary on Genesis - Volume 2
  • he ignored the clamor of the crowd
  • Upon opening the door, the clatter of trays on silverware and the clamor of voices competing with one another washed over them.
  • Philosophy, one of the poets says, is but ‘a clamorous hound, baying at her master’; the philosopher, says another, is ‘great’ only ‘in the vain babblements of fools’.
  • They all come down in a rain of clamoring tambourines and bottleneck slide guitars, clawhammer banjo picking, booming jug band blowing and barrelhouse piano rolls. FLY FISHING WITH DARTH VADER
  • Entirely new publications came into being to satisfy the insatiable demands of people clamoring for historical truth.
  • In our society, a multitude of spiritual gurus clamor for our attention.
  • So why are we suddenly hearing clamorous cries that we should, as the National Journal put it, "dismantle" this 40-year success story? Carl Pope: If it Ain't Broke, Don't Fix it
  • To those who did not think so deeply, and they were the greater number by a hundred to one, the splendour of Prince John's rheno, (i.e. fur tippet,) the richness of his cloak, lined with the most costly sables, his maroquin boots and golden spurs, together with the grace with which he managed his palfrey, were sufficient to merit clamorous applause. Ivanhoe. A Romance
  • And as we see it in experience, that dogs do always bark at those they know not, and that it is their nature to accompany one another in those clamors: so it is with the inconsiderate multitude; who wanting that virtue which we call honesty in all men, and that especial gift of God which we call charity in Christian men, condemn without hearing, and wound without offence given: led thereunto by uncertain report only; which his Majesty truly acknowledged for the author of all lies. Prefaces and Prologues to Famous Books with Introductions, Notes and Illustrations
  • Imperator, et cum multa gente nemus circumdat, canes emittuntur et aues, cum multo clamore, et feras congregant in medio nemoris, ad planiciem sibi sitam. The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville
  • Cocyti metuet tortosque Ixionis anguis immanemque rotam et non exsuperabile saxum. interea Dryadum siluas saltusque sequamur40 intactos, tua, Maecenas, haud mollia iussa. te sine nil altum mens incohat: en age segnis rumpe moras; uocat ingenti clamore Cithaeron. Exordium
  • When your novel comes out, publishers will be clamoring for your oeuvres de jeunesse, you know, and your blog may well be the subject of heated bidding! From Blog to Book « Tales from the Reading Room
  • The suspended beauty of dining upstairs comes at the expense of no acoustical buffer, and when the bar is clamorous, the sound rises up, rounds the arches, and comes crashing onto this suspended atoll like a final smackdown.
  • The public in general, somewhat apathetically, is neither clamoring for him to stay nor bellowing at him to leave. The Accidental Autocrat
  • Round the door of the Clifton House were about twenty ragged, vociferous drosky-drivers, of most demoralised appearance, all clamorous for “a fare.” The Englishwoman in America
  • he clamored for justice and tolerance
  • The maudlin clamor of "a pore lone lidy 'oos' subing 'ad desarted' er" failed to arouse anyone's curiosity. World's War Events, Vol. I
  • In any case, public clamor for inoculations might require a liberal vaccination program after an outbreak.
  • In the clamor of a battle, such noises and their exact location would be virtually impossible to distinguish even at close range.
  • They shrieked, yelled, blared, shrilled, and boomed the scandals and horrors of the moment in multivocal, multigraphic clamor, tainting the peaceful air breathed by everyday people going about their everyday business, with incredible blatancies which would be forgotten on the morrow in the excitement of fresh percussions, though the cumulative effect upon the public mind and appetite might be ineradicable. Success A Novel
  • Meanwhile, foreign investors are clamoring to get a piece of the newest meat on the market.
  • The group clamored to place bets and it took Anna a while to find her voice again.
  • Several Seahawks fans have been clamoring for a new nickname for the up-and-coming defense.
  • The corruption allegations have spurred public protests and mounting clamor for his immediate resignation.
  • As on earlier discs, he enlivens Caribbean traditions with masterful jazz piano, by turns clamorous, poignant, playful and even swinging.
  • While people were clamoring over the young couple, they seemed an odd match.
  • Of course, I answered him that I would make the "feint," regardless of public clamor at a distance, and I did make it most effectually; using all the old boats I could get about Milliken's Bend and the mouth of the Yazoo, but taking only ten small regiments, selected out of Blair's division, to make a show of force. Memoirs of the Union's Three Great Civil War Generals
  • Jonathan must himself have heard the growing clamor in the kitchen, for he hurried to finish.
  • I was pleasantly surprised to discover a clamorous, dim room filled with networked computers available dirt-cheap.
  • The bands of excited children who walked behind local militiamen heading to battle in the fall now clamor around machinery laying down new water pipes.
  • When all the financial world was clamoring for money and perishing through lack of it, the first of each month many thousands of dollars poured into his coffers from the water-rates, and each day ten thousand dollars, in dime and nickels, came in from his street railways and ferries. Chapter XX
  • Unfortunately for Urquhart, the only way to break through the media clamor is to have his most embarrassing gaffe resurrected. Tom Noyes: Glen Urquhart Struggles To Escape Shadow Of Christine O'Donnell
  • They were shouting and laughing, their voices rising above the clamor of the motor.
  • At its controversial opening night Nijinsky's choreography was considered almost as shocking as the churning rhythms and clamorous orchestration of Stravinsky's score.
  • Since then some investors clamored to create a market for selling their shares, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. Caesars IPO Opens Doors
  • Republican the next; which discovers and lifts up a prophet to-day that it may stone him tomorrow; which clamors for the book everybody else is reading, for no reason under the sun save that everybody else is reading it. These Bones shall Rise Again - Essay by Jack London
  • Christianity; and at Polycarp's martyrdom they joined the heathens in clamoring for his being cast to the lions; and when there was an obstacle to this, for his being burnt alive; and with their own hands they carried logs for the pile. synagogue of Satan -- Only once is the term "synagogue" in the New Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • The legion still persisted in clamorous sedition, when the emperor pronounced, with The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • I found a group of men standing outside the gates of the port, clamoring for customers to get into their cabs.
  • Drove down to the city center in the early afternoon and found a bar in which the lunchtime trade was brisk but not clamorous. THE HELLBOUND HEART
  • The clamor rose to such a level, that no one could get a word in edgewise.
  • Their clamor was a faint echo in the gold-domed chamber where Bunda Chand struggled on the velvet-cushioned dais. The Bloody Crown Of Conan
  • Sonorous snores cut through the clamor of the gathering.
  • Already he could hear the growing clamor of his three obstreperous children.
  • Aurora responded, also yelling over the clamor.
  • You killed him you killed him you... Through the clamor, I tried to think. SILENT JOE
  • Perhaps it was the hormones raging within my body, clamoring to get released.
  • Seeing as his friend was obviously unable to think with so much clamor round him, Everett led the way through the jumbled desks.
  • But hardly had we sat down ere we heard the tom-toming of the kettledrum and tantara of trumpets and clash of cymbals, and the rattling of war men's lances, and the clamors of assailants and the clanking of bits and the neighing of steeds, while the world was canopied with dense dust and sand clouds raised by the horses 'hoofs. Tehran Winter
  • The toreador's victorious march overlaps don Jose's killing of Carmen with the clamors of ‘Victoire!’
  • The group of chess lovers is often clamorous, but always concentrating, with more gazers and supporters than real players; each viewer a potential undercover chess player.
  • Jonathan must himself have heard the growing clamor in the kitchen, for he hurried to finish.
  • The clamors of the bar soon brought about … amendment … and left the code … a great cumbrous piece of machinery without driving-wheels, steam-chest or boiler, propelled along by the typical slow oxteam.9 A History of American Law
  • Instead of five years, let three years pass, and this clamorous Parlement shall have both seen its enemy hurled prostrate, and been itself ridden to foundering (say rather, jugulated for hide and shoes), and lie dead in the ditch. The French Revolution
  • Yes, it's purely anecdotal, but I couldn't help but notice how many rich people at the upscale event were clamoring for, dare I say it, a free pass in other words, a handout. Daniel Cubias: Notes From a Party for Rich People
  • The clamor of traffic has receded to a distant murmur.
  • So it was, exercising faculties that were no longer necessary, but that were still alive in him and clamorous for exercise, he followed the long-since passed wood-rat with all the soft-footed crouching craft of the meat-pursuer and with utmost fineness of reading the scent. CHAPTER XXIII
  • Ashore there was a clamor for Scundoo, and the whole population crowded his door, entreating and imploring in confused babel till he came forth and raised his hand. THE MASTER OF MYSTERY
  • When he had finished talking, there arose a great clamor of noise as everyone grabbed their belongings, and started to make their way out of the room and into the hall outside.
  • Nor was there any noticeable clamor for more full-throated commemorations.
  • Looking at her toes now, they clamored for attention in their nakedness.
  • Children clamored for the pig's bladder, to be used as a balloon.
  • The clamor of traffic has receded to a distant murmur.
  • The noisy clamor of men reacting far too late filled the air as they scuffled from side to side, screaming orders that no one particularly heard.
  • ] [Footnote 46: "Vibrantur bombardarum fulmina, Tartariæ volvuntur nubes, Martem sonant crepitacula, reboant summa montium juga, reboant valles, reboant undæ, claraque Nautarum percellit sydara clamor. The Voyage of the Vega round Asia and Europe, Volume I and Volume II
  • Bonus materials are abundant and include items fans have been clamoring for for years.
  • They prove that having plenty of corporate rah-rah isn't enough if the public isn't clamoring for your new toy.
  • The clamor of noise from the television interrupted my need for the serenity in the house.
  • And when his soul clamored for expression, it usually uttered itself in one or the other of the two ways, and more usually in both ways. BÂTARD
  • Clamor and outrage broke out and pandemonium reeked more havoc than anything else could.
  • The grief clamors once more, occupies entire pit of the stomach.
  • It was good to be amid the clamor and grime of the city; he'd had enough of Senator Dedalus and his odd James Bond manqué. FLOATING CITY
  • I mean the S&W hunting line is plain jane as it gets; no one is clamoring over a dumbed down TC ICON or a basic gas operated 12 gauge. Did You Keep Your Stock In S&W?
  • I cried out, while the conductor and brakeman and station-agent all called and holloed and clamored for Duncan to hurry. The Prairie Wife
  • Still the imperative clamor of my mind remained unallayed. The Promised Land
  • Page 39 at all, less resultful, come clamoring for mention: D.C. Barnes of Murfreesboro; Mrs. Ollie Webster of Siler City; Mrs. N. History of War Savings Campaign of 1918 in North Carolina
  • But while Norton's lavish tribute may well have had a certain avuncular motive, it's evident that the fervor and clamor of young Kipling's balladry stirred the old Brahmin to his bones. Who Was Kipling?
  • The chosen tore through the clamoring crowds and jammed onto the back of his three-wheeler put-putting on the roadside. The Hundred-Foot Journey
  • To prevent urban unrest, the country's leadership had to address the growing clamor for jobs.
  • The day in mid-January when the sun peeps over the horizon for the first time is greeted with such clamorous celebrations that it's a wonder it doesn't scuttle back behind the hills in fright.
  • Cultural barbarians were clamoring at the gate, eager to corrupt a venerable institution that gave the world Ingmar Bergman, Jean-Luc Godard, and Citizen Kane—and, to be fair, two competing films about the lambada that famously pitted Golan against Globus. My Year of Flops
  • Since the Hawks bolted in 1968, fans have not been clamoring for a team in St. Louis.
  • But underneath all the clamor and the noise, a single heart beats.
  • All the student organizations are clamoring to find new recruits from among the freshmen, and anybody else who cares to come.
  • The clamor against Blanco had resulted in his summary removal by royal decree and the appointment of a real "pacificator," Camilo Polavieja. The Social Cancer
  • He didn't need a stethoscope to hear my heart clamoring against my ribcage.
  • unconstitutionality," I resolved to show how little law the clamorers knew. History of Woman Suffrage, Volume III (of III)
  • Suddenly and with appalling quickness, the mastodonic brute reared up on its mighty hindlegs and elongated its neck and body in a furious effort to reach this vociferous pigmy whose clamor was disturbing the primeval silence of its ancient realm. Conan The Warrior
  • The voices and noise around them became apparent once more, a tide of excited news, a civilized clamor.
  • They no more got a bush rabbit than Tom and Adrian had got a stag, but the clambering and clamor of the beagles was a joy. Masters of the Hunt
  • In some countries some Muslims are clamoring for reenactment of fundamentalist Islamic measures.
  • Tied into wellness, of course, is weight management, and the yogurt case reflects American's ongoing clamor for lighter fare.
  • Maria Clara, in alarm, started toward him, but before any one could speak a fusilade sounded in the street; then random pistol shots, and cries and clamor. An Eagle Flight A Filipino Novel Adapted from Noli Me Tangere
  • The clamorous hunger in his belly seemed to justify him.
  • There is a note of barbarism in the brassy jar and clamor of the instruments, enhanced by the bewildering ambition of each player to force through his piece the most noise and jangle, which is not always covered and subdued into a harmonious whole by the whang of the bass drum. Their Pilgrimage
  • The ABC story notes the growing clamor for free and fair elections.
  • Evolved over hundreds of years and combining various influences from the history of the region - Gypsy, Sephardic, Moorish, Byzantine, and Latin American - flamenco is best to watch at fairs, where locals, often the best traditional flamenco dancers, who learned from childhood by watching relatives, burst into clamorous performances of stomping and clapping. The Prague Post
  • There was music and the sound of chatter in the background, the clamor of a dinner party in progress.
  • Critics, all from the upper-middle classes, associated street clamor with the lower social strata.
  • He looked at it suspiciously, and as he grabbed for it, the thunder only began to clamor loudly, sending more rain to beat down on the mansion.
  • Perhaps when all this is finished, she says, gesturing at the clamorous cement mixers and the spider's web of scaffolding, she will go away and give herself time to salve her sorrow, time to look back on precious memories, time to reflect.
  • Riotous they are, beyond a doubt, for even as the Che-hsein pours out the samshoo the clamorous howls of "Fankwae. Around the World on a Bicycle - Volume II From Teheran To Yokohama
  • At University College he entered literary life and joined a clamorous and rough-edged group of rivals who gave him the patterns of many of his most significant minor characters.
  • In our society, a multitude of spiritual gurus clamor for our attention.
  • And given the prospect of witnessing a Lakers-like dynasty, perhaps a waiting public would clamor loudly for a team.
  • His throat gaped, his chest heaved, his eyes squeezed shut involuntarily, and then with a clamorous noise, he let loose a sneeze that put even the colossal thunder crashing in the sky above to shame.
  • Still other camps serve pre-adolescents who, bubbling and tripping along with enthusiasm and zeal, are clamoring to figure out the concept of ‘us.’
  • The long middle movement, marked allegro agitato, and associated by Bloch with Yom Kippur, has an intense and clamorous opening but the mood alternated between that and pensive intervals.
  • They don't get to their apartment and the bath floods but they do make a sickeningly clamorous protest in trying.
  • _ I take _cursu canis_ as equivalent to _currente cane_, as in i. 324, _spumantis apri cursum clamore prementem_. The Aeneid of Virgil
  • kept up an obstreperous clamor
  • Suddenly and with appalling quickness, the mastodonic brute reared up on its mighty hind legs and elongated its neck and body in a furious effort to reach this vociferous pigmy whose clamor was disturbing the primeval silence of its ancient realm. The Conquering Sword of Conan
  • Postquam eo ventum est, unde a ferentariis [345] proelium committi posset, maximo clamore cum infestis signis [346] concurrunt; pila omittunt, gladiis res geritur. C. Sallusti Crispi De Bello Catilinario Et Jugurthino
  • As soon as the clamorous ring echoes through the school corridors, youngsters cram all their books and pencils into their school bags and join the mad scramble to leave the classroom.
  • It isn't until you find yourself fighting the clamorous daytime traffic to get to your business meetings that you start having second thoughts. A Business Traveler's Guide to Naples
  • China re-fixed the peg amid the financial panic of 2008, and now the American "revalue" clamor is rising again. The Yuan Scapegoat
  • You killed him you killed him you... Through the clamor, I tried to think. SILENT JOE
  • The ABC story notes the growing clamor for free and fair elections.
  • He barely even noticed the clamor of noise coming from Jennifer's room.
  • Her murmured words were lost in the clamor of running feet.
  • A clamorous group from the North-East who had started drinking at lunchtime lurched down one side of Micklegate, while on the other a hen night gathering from North Wales set about their task with equal enthusiasm.
  • Bumpy rides and clamoring restaurants used to be my worst nightmare, but as soon as I grabbed a headphone set, the world became my very own desk.
  • Christiani quoque qui nauigio appulsi sunt horribili pariter clamore cum Rege Baldwino, et graui strepitu vociferantes, The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • And yet people clamored for the job, which went to the highest bidder.
  • “I must work with circumspection in order to reply to their clamors,” he advised Forbes, because if anything went wrong “they would not hesitate to attribute it to the choice of the road.” George Washington’s First War
  • Nettamente pi indietro, 471 yds e 2 TD, Aaron Hernandez, che the Gainesville ha fatto rimpian! gere poc hissimo lottimo Cornelius Ingram rivelandosi fondamentale per il flitting diversion di Tebow, in cui ha sempre ricoperto un ruolo fondamentale al pari di Riley Cooper, clamorosamente escluso dalla corsa al Biletnikoff. Rites of Autumn Blog Archive College Football Awards: i finalisti.
  • Domitium Afrum, cum apud centumviros diceret graviter et lentè (hoc enim illi actionis genus erat), audiit ex proximo immodicum insolitumque clamorem; admiratus reticuit; ubi silentium factum est, repetit quod abruperat; iterum clamor, iterum reticuit; et post silentium, cœpit idem tertio. A Dialogue Concerning Oratory, Or The Causes Of Corrupt Eloquence The Works Of Cornelius Tacitus, Volume 8 (of 8); With An Essay On His Life And Genius, Notes, Supplements
  • Then the LUCCIOLA, the fire-fly of Tuscany, was seen to flash its sudden sparks among the foliage, while the cicala, with its shrill note, became more clamorous than even during the noon-day heat, loving best the hour when the English beetle, with less offensive sound, winds The Mysteries of Udolpho
  • Dennin's absence, and affected a mysterious air, while they clamored for information. THE UNEXPECTED
  • With each passing moment, as the horizon became a little brighter, the clamor became louder, until all the knights of the camp were up and about, making ready for their departure.
  • Note 2: RHF, 18: 728A: Ex historia episcoporum Autissiodorensium: "corpus pueri mortui, quod propter interdictum civitatis ecclesiasticam non poterat habere sepulturam, importuno matris pueri excitus clamore et lacrymis, in ipsa episcopi camera ante lectum domini sui episcopi fecit humari in contumeliam ejus et dei contemptum." back A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • The same thing happened with Starbucks: They came out with 'Frappuccino,' and competitors clamored to use the same portmanteau of 'frappe' and GOOD
  • Looking at her toes now, they clamored for attention in their nakedness.
  • To those who did not think so deeply, and they were the greater number by a hundred to one, the splendour of Prince John's _rheno_, (_i. e_. fur tippet,) the richness of his cloak, lined with the most costly sables, his maroquin boots and golden spurs, together with the grace with which he managed his palfrey, were sufficient to merit clamorous applause. Ivanhoe
  • There is something of majesty on "laying one's self down with a will," and there is something of strength in cloistering the body for the spirit's health's sake, but to die when all within is warm and clamorous for life is terrible. The Kempton-Wace Letters
  • There was a clamor of voices outside the office.
  • Investors have been clamoring for Chinese stocks like children pining for more dessert.

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