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roll call
noun
- the calling of a list of names, as of soldiers or students, for checking attendance.
- a military signal for this, as one given by a drum.
- a voting process, especially in the U.S. Congress, in which legislators are called on by name and allowed either to cast their vote or to abstain.
roll call
noun
- the reading aloud of an official list of names, those present responding when their names are read out
- the time or signal for such a reading
Word History and Origins
Origin of roll call1
Example Sentences
In September this year at the United Nations in New York, President Biden led a global roll call of leaders urging restraint between Israel and Hezbollah.
As the Germans held roll call while Levi and his fellow Italian Jews waited for deportation to Auschwitz in 1944, he wrote how the German officer asked, “Wieviel Stück?”
The mayor has also made regular visits to police roll calls across the city.
Even during the state roll call, delegation leaders spoke repeatedly about the need to protect women's rights.
The roll call had a DJ blasting tracks for each state, stopping the show when Lil Jon bounded in to introduce Georgia’s delegation and drop a few bars “Turn Down For What.”
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