a. [ad. med.L. clangōrōs-us, f. clangor: cf. clamorous, etc.] Full of clangor.

1

1712.  Steele, Spect., No. 334, ¶ 4. The clangorous Noise of a Smith’s Hammers.

2

1831.  Blackw. Mag., 874. A metallic music that seems to come clangorous from the cliffs.

3

1871.  R. Ellis, Catullus, lxiii. 29. [Gongs] give a clangorous echo.

4

  Hence Clangorously adv.

5

1858.  Carlyle, Fredk. Gt., II. IX. xi. 540. Friedrich Wilhelm’s voice, clangorously plaintive.

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