˜yĐÄvlog

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callback

or call-back

[ kawl-bak ]

noun

  1. an act of calling back.
  2. a summoning of workers back to work after a layoff.
  3. a summoning of an employee back to work after working hours, as for emergency business.
  4. a request to a performer who has auditioned for a role, booking, or the like to return for another audition.
  5. a return telephone call.
  6. an allusion to a joke made earlier in the same comedy act or show:

    The kitten yelling “Quiet!” at the end was a callback to earlier in the episode when the two normally silent brothers shouted it.



adjective

  1. of or relating to a return telephone call:

    Please leave a callback number.

verb phrase

  1. to telephone (a person) who has called earlier:

    Our staff will call you back within 24 hours.

  2. to summon or bring back; recall:

    He called back the messenger.

    The actor was called back for a second audition.

  3. to revoke; retract:

    to call back an accusation.

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˜yĐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of callback1

First recorded in 1925–30; noun use of verb phrase call back
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

That number dances right on the line of how much inequality talk this tonally insecure remake can take — especially when its modern money concerns clash with its callbacks to Walt’s beloved whimsy.

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The Tarantino callback isn’t the only surprise in the video—"Fast & Furious" star Tyrese Gibson also makes an appearance.

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Some of Trump's name choices are callbacks to America's expansionist age, when the prevailing ideology said that America had a God-given mission to expand from shore to shore.

From

To obtain a check, a property owner should email their name, address and a callback number to altadenahomecheck@lasd.org.

From

When it came time for the final callback in Rome, I just kept thinking, “Don’t overdo it, just do what you did.”

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