Obviously. The point being made is that the Clojure style discourages building DSLs and the like and prefers to remain close to Clojure types and constructs. It departs in various ways from traditionally Lisps.
does it really? https://github.com/simongray/clojure-dsl-resources
A good example is making GUIs in Clojure. At first there was a cool macro based system called `fn-fx` that maked a JavaFX GUI. Then vlaaad wrote `cljfx` which just used plain Clojure maps and removed the macros entirely. This increased the boilerplate a tiny amount but made the system much more flexible and extensible
"DSLs" can both mean "Using the language's variant of 'arrays' to build a DSL via specific shapes" like hiccup in Clojure does, and also "A mini-language inside of a program for a specific use case" like Cucumber is its own language for acceptance testing, but it's "built in in Ruby" in reality.
Clojure favors the "DSLs made out of shapes" rather than "DSLs that don't look/work like lisp inside of our programs".