call out in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for call out in the English»Spanish Dictionary

I.call [Am kɔl, Brit kɔːl] N

4. call (name, describe as):

CALL → computer-assisted learning, → computer-aided learning

I.out [Am aʊt, Brit aʊt] ADV out often appears as the second element of certain verb structures in English (come out, keep out, knock out, etc). For translations, see the relevant verb entry (come, keep, knock, etc).

1.2. out (not at home, work):

to eat or form dine out
to eat or form dine out

II.out [Am aʊt, Brit aʊt] ADJ

III.out [Am aʊt, Brit aʊt] PREP

IV.out [Am aʊt, Brit aʊt] N

See also call out, speak out, out of, go out, cry out

call out VB [Am kɔl -, Brit kɔːl -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

speak out VB [Am spik -, Brit spiːk -] (v + adv)

go out VB [Am ɡoʊ -, Brit ɡəʊ -] (v + adv)

cry out VB [Am kraɪ -, Brit krʌɪ -] (v + adv)

call out in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for call out in the English»Spanish Dictionary

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
During the infilling process the original gas pipes leading to these lamps were damaged resulting in an emergency call out for the local gas board.
en.wikipedia.org
They used his sister as a way of capturing him; she was to call out to him and lure him out of his hiding place.
en.wikipedia.org
He also alerted the after hours call out squad.
en.wikipedia.org
He would have to call out the militia to collect his royalties.
en.wikipedia.org
The better ones make us call out to them.
en.wikipedia.org
In another variant of the basic game, a player may simply point to their suspect and call out their accusation.
en.wikipedia.org
He confirmed they did not call out the last two signals.
en.wikipedia.org
Inversely, audiences may call out for change in an antecedent genre and create an entirely new genre.
en.wikipedia.org
Doors slam shut by themselves and disembodied voices clearly call out for help.
en.wikipedia.org
As used by sailors, the person at the front of the team will typically call out the two, six part of the chant.
en.wikipedia.org

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