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clamouring

[ UK /klˈæmɜːɹɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. loud and persistent outcry from many people
    he ignored the clamor of the crowd

How To Use clamouring In A Sentence

  • Regardless of the eurozone turmoil and global recession, consumers and health bodies are still clamouring for Botox. Botox helps to create an Irish boom town amid economic gloom
  • They may be clamouring for democracy and progress, but Lebanon's chieftains are feudal at heart.
  • Nor does there seem a host of players outside the XI clamouring for attention. Times, Sunday Times
  • Invariably the butt of the family joker, he leaves his wife clamouring for an image maker for a husband.
  • 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.
  • 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
  • At breakfast next morning my two grandsons were clamouring to go swimming.
  • There is also the added Carbon footprint of freight and packaging in that Country, and the extra workers needed at all the hardware stores to cover the increase in visitors all 'clamouring' for the free light globes. PA Pundits - International
  • 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.
  • Entirely new publications came into being to satisfy the insatiable demands of people clamoring for historical truth.
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