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Discover LudwigThe word "clamor" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to a loud noise or outcry or as a verb meaning to make a loud noise or outcry. Example: The crowd's clamor for the candidate's attention grew louder and louder.
Dictionary
clamor
noun
A great outcry or vociferation; loud and continued shouting or exclamation.
Exact(60)
There is a clamor now in the political classes to toughen the laws.
The long-oppressed population would overthrow Fidel's revolutionary cronies and clamor for capital, expertise, and leadership from the north to transform Cuba into a market democracy with strong ties to the United States.But that moment has come and gone and none of what Washington and the exiles anticipated has come to pass.
Later works (Clamor [1957 63; "Clamour"] and Homenaje [1967; "Homage"]) displayed keener awareness of suffering and disorder.
There are some still in Westeros who clamor for their return.
In Ackroyd's view, such clamor inspired in Chaucer his love of concreteness and variety.
We sat at a cafe in a narrow street behind Tahrir, one of the places of quiet reprieve we used to retreat to during the revolution, when the clamor or tear gas grew to be too much.
I don't remember the post-game coverage from the Chicago Bulls runs in the nineties too well, but did Phil Jackson's sons clamor for Bison Dele?
The movie is a symphony of New York voices — a time capsule of accents and tones — as well as of faces, which, in Wiseman's probing, empathetic closeups, reflect the clamor and the complexity of the city at large.
The Yanukovych crowd was in an uproar, and the clamor grew after a phone conversation on the subject between Tymoshenko and Georgia's Saakashvili was published online: TYMOSHENKO: I want to thank you for sending such a team to Ukraine.... SAAKASHVILI: No, we're really sending our most reliable and battle-ready people.
He has brought us to live apart from the clamor and lies of the unbelieving.
The cinematic clamor of competing voices in "Vile Bodies" bears traces of the pub talk in "The Waste Land"; you can still hear it in "Excursion in Reality," written in 1932, with its clicking exchange of dry-hearted lovers: 'I say, was I beastly tonight?" "Lousy".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com