I.to call or cry out, to shout, exclaim after or in reply to any thing (not in Cic. or Cæs.); with obj.-clause: “haec Virginio vociferanti succlamabat multitudo, nec illius dolori nec suae libertati se defuturos,” Liv. 3, 50, 10: quidam ausi sunt mediā ex contione succlamare: “Abite hinc, ne, etc.,” id. 44, 45; cf.: “si esset libera haec civitas, non tibi succlamassent,” id. 6, 40: “cum centuria fre quens succlamasset, nihil se mutare sententiae, etc.,” id. 26, 22, 8: “cui dicto,” Val. Max. 6, 2, 3.—Impers. pass.: succlamatum est, et frequenter a militibus Ventidianis, Brut. ap. Cic. Fam. 11, 13, 3: “ad hoc cum succlamatum est,” Liv. 10, 25; 21, 18; 42, 53. —
(β).
Pass.: “publicā succlamatus invidiā,” cried out against, Quint. Decl. 18, 9: “omnium maledictis succlamatus,” id. ib. 19, 3.