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Meanings of more clamorous in English
We have no meanings for "more clamorous" in our records yet.
Usage of more clamorous in English
1
His eyes were moreclamorous still, insistent in their demand upon Malling.
2
They continued to grow louder and moreclamorous in her brain.
3
The joy of Cassandra was moreclamorous, and less restrained.
4
Are there moreclamorous voices than those of physical need?
5
The more they drank, the moreclamorous became their grief, and the faster flowed their tears.
6
The more brilliant and uniform his successes, the moreclamorous a certain class of people became.
7
It's the old drunkards who are always moreclamorous for total abstinence than the moderately temperate.
8
Through the spring and summer of 1836 the talk of internal improvements grew more general and moreclamorous.
9
He modestly declined, of course; and, equally of course, his modesty only made the people the moreclamorous.
10
But the islands had drawn closer since morning and the birds seemed busier than usual and moreclamorous.
11
Seeing this, the boys who had wished to guide him to the Staubach became moreclamorous than ever.
12
Move on! they would merely separate in one spot to join a moreclamorous group a few yards off.
13
The Puritans daily became moreclamorous and intolerant; their "Exercises" more turbulent, and their demands more unreasonable and one-sided.
14
Their reply to it all takes the form of howls of disapproval, and the importunities to ride become moreclamorous than ever.
15
As the insistence upon a removal of these abuses and upon a grant of genuine self-government became steadily moreclamorous, three political groups appeared.