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 clamor ['klæmɚ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 喧闹, 叫嚷, 大声的要求

vt. 喧嚷, 大声地要求

vi. 喧嚷, 大声地要求


  1. The clamor of traffic gave me a headache.
    交通噪音让我头痛。
  2. They made a clamor for reform.
    他们强烈要求改革。
  3. A din; a clamor.
    喧闹;吵闹


clamor
[ noun ]
  1. a loud harsh or strident noise

  2. <noun.event>
  3. loud and persistent outcry from many people

  4. <noun.communication>
    he ignored the clamor of the crowd
[ verb ]
  1. make loud demands

  2. <verb.communication> clamour
    he clamored for justice and tolerance
  3. utter or proclaim insistently and noisily

  4. <verb.communication>
    clamour
    The delegates clamored their disappointment
  5. compel someone to do something by insistent clamoring

  6. <verb.social>
    They clamored the mayor into building a new park


Clamor \Clam"or\, n. [OF. clamour, clamur, F. clameur, fr. L.
clamor, fr. clamare to cry out. See {Claim}.]
1. A great outcry or vociferation; loud and continued
shouting or exclamation from many people. --Shak. [Also
spelled {clamour}.]

Syn: clamor, hue and cry.
[1913 Webster + WordNet 1.5]

2. Any loud and continued noise. --Addison.

3. A continued expression of dissatisfaction or discontent; a
popular outcry. --Macaulay.

Syn: Outcry; exclamation; noise; uproar.


Clamor \Clam"or\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Clamored}; p. pr. & vb.
n. {Clamoring}.]
1. To salute loudly. [R.]

The people with a shout
Rifted the air, clamoring their god with praise.
--Milton
.

2. To stun with noise. [R.] --Bacon.

3. To utter loudly or repeatedly; to shout.

Clamored their piteous prayer incessantly.
--Longfellow.

To clamor bells, to repeat the strokes quickly so as
to produce a loud clang. --Bp.
Warbur?ion.


Clamor \Clam"or\, v. i.
To utter loud sounds or outcries; to vociferate; to talk in a
loud voice; to complain; to make importunate demands.

Syn: clamor, roar, vociferate, holler, hollo.
[1913 Webster + WordNet 1.5]

The obscure bird
Clamored the livelong night. --Shak.

2. to dispute in a loud voice.

Syn: brawl, wrangle, clamor.
[WordNet 1.5]

  1. She acknowledges that there is some unwillingness among banks to lend but says there isn't any great clamor from consumers and businesses to borrow, either.
  2. He said much of the clamor for his resignation was coming from a "lynch mob" that included the press.
  3. With foreigners holding a 10 percent market share, domestic makers are starting to clamor for a dumping investigation.
  4. Businesses executives clamor for the state subsidies Menem curtailed, and resent the tariff reductions and free-market currency exchange rate that push them to compete more aggressively with overseas producers.
  5. The advances were fed by a continued clamor for shares from foreign institutions in the wake of the airport agreement, as well as local enthusiasm about climbing property prices.
  6. Thus ended a primary season that began with the clamor of more than a dozen candidates but sorted out quickly.
  7. That, in turn, helped stimulate a huge and continuing import boom, ravaging many of the nation's industries and increasing the clamor for trade barriers.
  8. Economics and bureaucratic chaos were at least as important in causing the clamor for standards during the 1930s, he said.
  9. A Soviet rocker says it doesn't matter where you are, youth still clamor for music about the same things: sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll.
  10. Could the clamor that likely would surround a huge rise in coffee prices torpedo the legislation?
  11. When the New Year's clamor is over, consumer borrowers will face a somewhat harsher tax environment, one in which the helping hand of Uncle Sam will have been removed.
  12. The army has also refused to distribute gas masks to civilians, despite a clamor from those fearing Iraqi chemical warfare.
  13. A century-old clock in this quintessential New England town has pitted old-timers fond of its hourly chiming against a pair of newcomers who say the clamor is taking a toll on their sleep.
  14. Two court decisions, regulatory delays and congressional clamor have all but dashed Texas Air's goal of transforming Eastern into a low-cost carrier in time for the busy summer travel season.
  15. So I would simply resist the clamor that nothing seems to be bubbling around, that nothing is happening.
  16. "For the Afrikaner, the church is No. 1," says Willie Lubbe, a Pretoria theologian who is orchestrating the clamor of those against the synod decisions and against reform in general.
  17. Music also helped keep the strikers going _ and drowned out the rising clamor of arguments among students whose bodies weakened and nerves frayed.
  18. Cheney, responding to the Democratic clamor for military cuts in response to rapid changes in Europe, said his blueprint would trim $2.4 billion from President Bush's $307 billion defense budget for 1991 and would save $34.8 billion through 1997.
  19. In our accountable political culture, politicians cannot counsel benign neglect for long before they are drowned out by a popular clamor for action.
  20. One minute of darkness will not make us blind." While the government pursues racial reform on several other fronts, rigid apartheid remains the rule at state-run schools, despite a growing clamor for change.
  21. There had been a clamor for his dismissal since the revolution.
  22. Short sellers, who sell borrowed stock in hopes they can profit by replacing it later at a lower price, sometimes clamor to buy shares if they unexpectedly rise.
  23. The London incident occurred during international clamor over the March 15 execution of a London-based journalist on spying charges.
  24. Amid the clamor of politicians' anti-Japanese rhetoric, the British cabinet last week hastily armed itself with new powers to exclude Japanese concerns from London's booming financial markets.
  25. Because the malady is rare and isn't life-threatening, there hasn't been much clamor or economic motivation to pursue a cure.
  26. When word of the whales' plight went out, an international clamor arose to rescue them.
  27. As clamor over the case grew, the House and Senate accelerated action on the bill.
  28. A clamor about index arbitrage compelled several major brokerages to announce earlier this year they had suspended its use for themselves but would do it for customers.
  29. One senior administration aide emphasizes that "we don't want what happened in 1979 in Iran," when the clamor for changing the shah's regime spun out of control and the result was the rise of Ayatollah Khomeini.
  30. However, Mr. Milken's attorneys oppose any release of the memo before next week, arguing that early release could lead to "undue public clamor and improper pressure" on the court.
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