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Перевод: clamour speek clamour


[существительное]
шум ; крики ; шумные протесты; возмущение; ропот ;
[глагол]
кричать; шумно требовать; галдеть


Тезаурус:

  1. Journalists read it and the clamour quietened.
  2. He missed Aintree's colour and clamour, the release of easing his mount to the first fence after the parade.
  3. This gentle admonition did little to still the clamour of unilateralists in the churches; yet there must surely be many Christians who have retained enough faith in divine Providence to believe that the world will not end unless God wills it and that, if He does, it will be for the best.
  4. Through him Gabriel learns the true nature of Elena's vision, which points to the sovereignty of love amid the warring clamour of Catholicism and Communism.
  5. No one is now demanding justice for the dead and disappeared (during Marcos's rule), today the clamour is for justice for one dead man.
  6. Standing waiting, he heard the noise of the city oddly magnified, like the clamour of a classical triumph, with guns and bells, drums and trumpets and piping.
  7. Each of the problems that beset Gorbachev - the shrinking authority of the Communist Party, the military discontent, nationalist clamour, the dogged demands of the Balts for the return of their stolen countries - each of these was a crisis in its own right; but each was overshadowed by, and interconnected with, the failure of the economy and shortage of food, the failure of government.
  8. Then, as they came out onto an open stretch of bitten turf at the foot of the hill where the rabbits were running, as though a signal had been given a universal clamour broke out, a clatter, a din of singing, from the unseen roof-tops of the village behind them, from the beeches on the Down, from the ash trees that stood like singing poles in the hedgerows along the hollow track, from every tree it seemed of the whole vast forest birds were singing and singing and demanding to be heard.
  9. The wobbly clamour was for more, and now they're going into full production.
  10. Corbett was oblivious to everything else as he travelled down into the city: the dirty streets, the noisy clamour of the traders, even the mixture of rich smells from bakeries, cookshops and heaps of human and animal ordure steaming in the summer sun.
  11. About 15 mainly Protestant and professional Belfast-based activists have made the trip to Brighton this year, adding their voices to the clamour as the largely indifferent stream of Labour delegates pours from the conference centre at lunchtime.
  12. "Different interests, differing parties, all join in a universal clamour," wrote Daniel Defoe from Edinburgh on 9 August 1707, "and the very Whigs declare openly they will join with France or King James or anybody rather than be insulted, as they call it, by the English."
  13. This was leaked to the media, who began to clamour for stricter control.

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