call in
Americanverb phrase
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to call for payment; collect.
The family struggled because her father was unwilling to call in the debts owed to him.
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to call upon for consultation; ask for help.
Management called in an independent engineering firm to determine the cause behind the roof collapse.
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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.
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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.
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to visit.
We were instructed to call in to the office later to pay and complete the formal paperwork.
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to withdraw from circulation.
The country’s leader issued a proclamation calling in all gold coins and gold certificates.
noun
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Radio and Television. a program in which listeners or viewers phone in comments or questions to the host or a person being interviewed.
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Radio and Television. a live telephone conversation intended for broadcasting between a program's host and a person being interviewed.
adjective
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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.
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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.
verb
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to pay a visit, esp a brief or informal one
call in if you are in the neighbourhood
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(tr) to demand payment of
to call in a loan
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(tr) to take (something) out of circulation, because it is defective or no longer useful
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(tr) to summon to one's assistance
they had to call in a specialist
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Summon for help or consultation, as in We've decided to call in a specialist to look at Father . [Second half of 1600s]
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Withdraw from circulation, as in We're calling in all the old models . [Late 1500s]
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Communicate by telephone, as in In this office salesmen must call in once a day . [Mid-1900s]
Etymology
Origin of call in
First recorded in 1480–90
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
"My shifts at work landed on the same days, too. During my morning shower, I felt faint; I had to be realistic and call in sick. My body was completely exhausted, aching and cramping."
From BBC ● Jul. 8, 2026
But it feels more egregious than a bad call in the run of play because it’s justice — or injustice — meted out arbitrarily, unevenly and after the fact.
From Los Angeles Times ● Jul. 2, 2026
One day during spring training, Preston was sitting in Thomson’s office when Dombrowski asked him to call in Don.
From The Wall Street Journal ● Jun. 20, 2026
During an earnings call in April, Musk said that Tesla will spend $3 billion on a research facility in Texas capable of making “a few thousand wafers” per month for chips.
From MarketWatch ● Jun. 18, 2026
Then I’d call in a loud voice, “Jimbo! Where are you? Come on, Jimbo!”
From "Summer of the Monkeys" by Wilson Rawls
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.