Lewis & Short

Parsing inflected forms may not always work as expected. If the following does not give the correct word, try Latin Words or Perseus.

clāmōsē, adv., v. clamosus, I.

clāmōsus, a, um, adj. [clamor] (mostly post-Aug.), full of clamor or noise, i. e.,

  1. I. Act., clamoring or bawling continually or loudly, clamorous, noisy, bawling: turbidus et clamosus altercator, Quint. 6, 4, 15: pater, Juv. 14, 191: magister, Mart. 5, 84, 2.
    * Adv.: clāmōsē, clamorously: clamose ne dicamus omnia, Quint. 11, 3, 45.
  2. II. Pass., filled with noise or clamor, noisy: urbs, Stat. S. 4, 4, 18: theatri turba, id. ib. 3, 5, 16: valles, id. Th. 4, 448: circus, Juv. 9, 144; Mart. 10, 53: Subura, id. 12, 18, 2.
    Poet. with gen.: undae clamosus Helorus, Sil. 14, 269.
    1. B. Accompanied with noise or clamor: actio, Quint. 5, 3, 2: Phasma Catulli, Juv. 8, 186: adceleratio, Auct. Her. 3, 13, 23: mortes boum, Veg. Vet. 4, pr. 1.