Obs. or dial. [f. CLUTTER v. + -MENT.] Crowding, confused and noisy bustle; also concr. that which crowds and confuses a place.
1611. Cotgr., Tourbe, prease, crowd, thrust, throng, clutterment.
1630. Holyday, Technogamia, C iv b. Here a chaire, there a tub here a wheele, there a reele; and an hundred such clutterments.
a. 1693. Urquhart, Rabelais, III. xiii. A solitary Privacy far from the rustling clutterments of the tumultuous and confused World.