a. [ad. L. conclāmānt-, pr. pple. stem of conclāmāre.] Calling out together.

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a. 1796.  Reid, Wks. (1849), I. 801/2.

        The Word, forth sent by the conclamant voice
Of mankind, errs not; for its truth is God’s.

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1890.  Daily News, 12 Aug., 2/2. Reason and conscience … he must … obey their conclamant voice.

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1910.  G. A. England, in Scrap Book, IX. No. 4, 634/2. The conclamant savagery of sea, sky, wind, and wave, as though the world were a mad world.

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