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View synonyms for call in

call in

[ kawl in ]

verb phrase

  1. to call for payment; collect:

    The family struggled because her father was unwilling to call in the debts owed to him.

  2. to call upon for consultation; ask for help:

    Management called in an independent engineering firm to determine the cause behind the roof collapse.

  3. to inform, report, or request by telephone:

    The electric company will reward customers with a credit if they call in their own meter readings.

    Your doctor can call in the prescription to your local pharmacy.

  4. to participate in a meeting or a radio or television program by telephone:

    The listeners who call in to my talk show about science ask the most intriguing questions.

  5. to visit:

    We were instructed to call in to the office later to pay and complete the formal paperwork.

  6. to withdraw from circulation:

    The country’s leader issued a proclamation calling in all gold coins and gold certificates.



noun

  1. Radio and Television. a program in which listeners or viewers phone in comments or questions to the host or a person being interviewed.
  2. Radio and Television. a live telephone conversation intended for broadcasting between a program's host and a person being interviewed.

adjective

  1. Radio and Television. relating to or featuring such phone calls or conversations:

    My call-in program about gardening airs once a week on the local public radio station.

  2. being or relating to a meeting, service, etc., that is accessed by telephone:

    The agenda will be sent out the morning of the meeting, along with all the call-in numbers needed.

    The grant funds a call-in hotline for low-income residents in the metro area.

call in

verb

  1. introften foll byon to pay a visit, esp a brief or informal one

    call in if you are in the neighbourhood

  2. tr to demand payment of

    to call in a loan

  3. tr to take (something) out of circulation, because it is defective or no longer useful
  4. tr to summon to one's assistance

    they had to call in a specialist

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of call in1

First recorded in 1480–90
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Example Sentences

"They really don’t want to be called in to testify."

From Salon

After Trump’s victory, McCoy joked from the pulpit: “This week, Charlie’s going back to Washington to meet with the president because he’s going to call in his markers.”

They called in a detection van from the Post Office in an attempt to trace the walkie-talkie signal.

From BBC

Remarkably, I discovered a Lancashire Telegraph article from 2015 headlined “Blackburn man made 15,000 ‘dirty’ calls in 91 days to total strangers”.

From BBC

The former Conservative Justice Secretary David Gauke has been called in by Labour to review sentencing, following the early release of nearly 3,000 offenders in recent weeks.

From BBC

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