| 1. | a loud uproar, as from a crowd of people: the clamor of the crowd at the gates. |
| 2. | a vehement expression of desire or dissatisfaction: the clamor of the proponents of the law. |
| 3. | popular outcry: The senators could not ignore the clamor against higher taxation. |
| 4. | any loud and continued noise: the clamor of traffic; the clamor of birds and animals in the zoo. |
| 5. | to make a clamor; raise an outcry. |
| 6. | to drive, force, influence, etc., by clamoring: The newspapers clamored him out of office. |
| 7. | to utter noisily: They clamored their demands at the meeting. |