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last call

[ last kawl ]

noun

  1. an announcement made in a bar shortly before service of alcoholic beverages ends (sometimes used attributively): I’m getting too old for last call hookups.

    We do last call 30 minutes before we close the doors, and we stop serving drinks 10 minutes after last call.

    I’m getting too old for last call hookups.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of last call1

An Americanism dating back to 1935–40

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Example Sentences

I cried buckets after that last call but he never rang me again.

When told to stand up after the last call from the mosque, none of us could.

The last call announced their arrival, and the unmarked police car spotted them on the corner.

Boehner “certainly comes from a long tradition,” says Daniel Okrent, author of Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition.

Daniel Okrent is the author of Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition.

All except Betty, who kept on desperately, doggedly, her muscles barely able to respond to the last call she was making upon them.

I've been waiting for the ladies to return my last call, but we were down in this vicinity, so I stopped.

But this was fated to be the doctors last call to that patient.

This is the last call for dinner in the dining-car, for you.

Just once, since Arkwright's last call, she had tried to sing that song.

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