¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Clamorers
1. clamorer [n] - See also: clamorer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Clamorers
Literary usage of Clamorers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Initiative and Referendum: Its Folly, Fallacies, and Failure by James Boyle (1912)
"DANIEL WEBSTER ON "CONSTANT clamorers." In 1833, Daniel Webster, in a speech in
the United States Senate, gave utterance to the following outburst against ..."
2. Thirty Years' View; Or, A History of the Working of the American Government by Thomas Hart Benton (1856)
"Broken banks, and their political confederates, are the clamorers against it ...
These banks, and these politicians, are the sole clamorers against the ..."
3. New Englander and Yale Review by Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight (1888)
"Yet the very loudest clamorers for this burden on the people, are also the loudest
clamorers for leaving the foreign author to be robbed and our own author ..."
4. History of the Eighteenth Century and of the Nineteenth Till the Overthrow by Friedrich Christoph Schlosser (1845)
"This design could not be effected by ordinary means, and therefore it was found
necessary to employ the same clamorers and the same mob, called the people, ..."
5. Publishers Weekly by Publishers' Board of Trade (U.S.), Book Trade Association of Philadelphia, American Book Trade Union, Am. Book Trade Association, R.R. Bowker Company (1921)
"There will be many clamorers, too, for the two new Bubble Books: "The Child's
Garden of Verse Bubble Book" and "The Chimney Corner Bubble Book" (Harper). ..."
6. The Works of Alexander Hamilton by Alexander Hamilton (1904)
"... as the clamorers assure us, from patriotic motives, it must be confessed that
they have the additional merit of novelty and singularity. ..."