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17 Phrasal Verbs With Call'
17 Phrasal Verbs With Call'
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a. To give a child the same name as someone else, especially someone from the same family
The baby was called after her grandmother.
She was called Sally after her great aunt.
2. CALL AROUND
a. To visit someone
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There are many ‘call’ phrasal verbs to describe the act of visiting someone at their
home for a short time. These are: ‘call in’, ‘call in on’, ‘call on’, ‘call round’, ‘call
around’ and ‘call by’. They are all very similar in meaning and are often used in
native conversational English.
3. CALL AT
a. To stop at a place for a brief period of time (usually referring to a ship or train)
This train will call at: Eastbourne, Brighton and Croydon…
The ship will call at several ports en route to the Bahamas.
4. CALL AWAY
a. To ask someone to leave somewhere or stop what they’re doing in order to go somewhere else,
usually urgently.
The doctor was called away during dinner to attend to a patient.
She was called away from the meeting to take an urgent phone call.
5. CALL BACK
It is a common mistake to confuse the word ‘recall’ with ‘call back’. The suffix ‘re-’ usually
means: to do something again. However, the word ‘recall’ means: to remember or to officially
order the return of an item. You cannot ‘recall someone on the phone’. Instead we say ‘call back’.
6. CALL BY
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7. CALL DOWN
8. CALL FOR
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onK_YRj-XD0
10. CALL IN
a. To telephone somewhere (often a television or radio station to give your opinion, or your place of
work)
Call in to tell us about your funny pets and you could win £100!
Sally called in to work sick today.
b. To ask someone to come and carry out a job
We had to call in the electrician as all the lights went out.
A common phrase in British English is ‘call in sick’. This is used to inform your boss that you
won’t be coming into work because you are ill or unwell. In UK slang, ‘pull a sickie’ is used when
someone pretends to be ill in order to have a day off work! For example, ‘I had a heavy weekend so
I pulled a sickie on Monday!’.
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11. CALL IN ON
13. CALL ON
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a. To visit someone
Let’s call round on the Smiths later as we’ve been meaning to see them for ages.
I was thinking of calling round later, if you’re going to be home.
16. CALL UP
a. To telephone someone
I called up Tom yesterday as we hadn’t spoken in months.
b. To be summoned for military service
I was called up when I was just 17!
c. To bring back memories
That music calls up summers in the Lake District.
d. To use magic to try and make the spirit of a dead person appear
One Halloween we tried to call up the ghost of my step-mother!
e. To open something on the computer, bring up (Brit. Eng)
If you want to call up the document, we can go through it together.
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Task A
Task B
Match the phrasal verbs 1-8 with their correct meanings a-h:
1. Call back
2. Call at
3. Call away
4. Call upon
5. Call out
6. Call in
7. Call after
8. Call round
a. To ask someone to leave somewhere or stop what they’re doing in order to go somewhere else,
usually urgently
b. To challenge or criticise someone
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Task C
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