[f. prec. sb.] intr. To make a clangor; to clang.
1837. Carlyle, Fr. Rev. (1872), III. I. iv. 20. At Paris, all steeples are clangouring.
1877. Mrs. Hamilton King, Disciples, Ugo Bassi, vii. (ed. 3), 281. The Artillery rolled out
Along the streets heavily clangouring.