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  • Hi. Welcome back to www.engvid.com. I'm Adam. Today's lesson is, again, a phrasal lesson,

  • a phrasal verbs lesson. We're going to look at the verb "call". And again, a phrasal verb

  • is a verb plus a preposition that together sometimes have meanings completely different

  • than the words themselves. Okay?

  • So, which ones are we going to look at today? We're going to look at "call on". Sometimes

  • you will hear people say: "Call upon". More or less the same usage. "Call up", "call back",

  • "call for", "call in", "call off", "call to"-and this is a little different because you always

  • need something else here, but I'll show you that-"call into"-also you need something at

  • the end here, because by itself it doesn't really work-and "on call".

  • Now, "on call" is not a phrasal verb. In fact, it's not a verb at all. This is actually a

  • situation. So, I'm going to start with this one. So, for example, "on call" is when you're

  • available at any time for a certain position. So, for example, if I'm a doctor or a nurse,

  • at some point in my career, usually at the beginning, I will have a lot of on-call work,

  • meaning that I have to be ready. Anytime somebody calls, I have to go to the hospital and do

  • the work. A lot of jobs, for example, waitresses or even retail jobs, they give you an on-call

  • position. It means it's not part time, it's not full time, it's on call. When they need

  • you, they will call you, you will go to work right away. When they need you again, you'll

  • go back. So, it's... Could be used as an adjective or a noun. A noun as the situation, "on call"

  • to describe your position.

  • Okay, let's get to the verbs. "Call on". So, if I call on you for help, that means I'm

  • asking you for help. So, you call on someone to help you do something. You also "call upon",

  • but this is not necessarily a person. You can call upon your wits, you can call upon

  • your intelligence. It means you want to draw. So you're asking your brain to give you the

  • tools you need to do something. So, this job is going to... Is going to call on all our

  • energy, all our brains, all our confidence to do this job. So that's "call on". Okay?

  • Okay, let's go to the next one. Excuse me. "Call up". A few meanings to this one. One is just telephone.

  • "Oh, yeah, I'll see you next week. I'll call you up sometime and we'll go out for a drink."

  • Okay? So you can say: "Call someone" or you can "call someone up",

  • basically means the same thing. But in sports or in the military, it has a different use.

  • In sports it's a promotion. So, many professional teams, they have the amateur teams or the

  • semi-professional teams that their youngest... Their young athletes play there, and when

  • they get good enough, they're called up to the big team, to the professional team. So,

  • for example, in hockey you have your NHL teams, your professional league teams, you have your

  • farm teams. This is the... We call these the "farm teams".

  • Okay? That's the ones that are

  • just learning, they are young guys, they are trying to get up to the major leagues or the

  • major teams. So, you call them up. They've done well, they're called up to the next level.

  • In military, some countries, they have a draft. It means that they pick out young people to

  • become soldiers and go to war. So, when they draft them, they're calling them up. Okay?

  • They're out of high school or college, or whatever the situation, and they're called

  • up to serve. It means they're going to the army. Okay.

  • So now we're going to look at "call back". So, of course, there's always:

  • "Hey, come back." So you're calling out to somebody, asking them to come back, to return. And the

  • same thing you can do with a telephone call. I call somebody at their office, let's say,

  • the person is not available, out to lunch or away from the office or in a meeting, and

  • I leave a message and I say: "Can you please ask him or her to call me back?" Basically,

  • return my phone call. Okay. Now, another common use of "call back" is when you have an interview

  • or audition.

  • So, an "audition" is when an actor goes to try to get a part in a movie,

  • or a TV show, or a play, whatever. So they go for an audition, they go to show what they

  • can do. Now, if they are called back, that means they are invited to a second audition.

  • Or in an interview, they're invited to a second interview. So it's very uncommon these days

  • in professional situations, if you go to an interview, they're not going to give you the

  • job right away. They are interviewing many, many people, they will finish all the first

  • interviews, and then they will call back people for the second interview. So if you get a...

  • Some... It's also a noun. You can say: "a callback". If you get a callback, that means

  • you've been invited for a second interview; or in the case of acting, for a second audition.

  • Okay? So these are the common uses of "back".

  • "Call for". Now, if you call for something, if a situation calls for something, it means

  • it demands it or it requires it. Okay? Or so, for example: This situation calls for

  • special attention. Okay? That's what this situation needs. It calls for this, it calls

  • for that. So, for example, if I need... If I need to do something that's very, very expert

  • or very, very niche, I might... The job itself might call for an expert or a specialist.

  • So then I would call in a specialist, but I'll get to that in a second.

  • Another "call for", somebody comes... Your son or daughter comes home from school to get the mail from

  • their college they applied to, they open it: -"I got accepted! I got accepted!"

  • -"Well, this calls for a celebration!" and you go and get the wine: "Cheers, cheers, cheers."

  • So, to find something appropriate for an occasion. So, the occasion calls for a response. Okay?

  • So, calling for champagne always a good idea.

  • So, again, "call in". So, like I said before, if you have to call in somebody, means you

  • have to bring a specialist. Call in an expert, call in somebody who has knowledge about something

  • so you can do whatever the task needs to do. Another meaning of "call in", and again, going

  • back to the telephone: If you want to give a message, you can call it in. So, for example,

  • if I'm really, really sick... So, this morning, I woke up, I'm sneezing, I have a fever. I

  • really feel bad. I don't want to go to work. So, I don't go to the office, tell them:

  • "Look, I'm sick, I'm going home." I just call in sick. It means I telephone, I say:

  • "Yeah, I'm sick, I'm not coming in today." Okay, everybody understands. No problem. You can

  • call in your message. If you have to vote. For example, if I want to vote in my country's

  • election but I'm out of the country, some... Some countries will let you call in your vote.

  • You can call, leave your message, leave your vote, they accept it, that's it.

  • "Call off". If you call off something, it means cancelled. Okay? So you had a party

  • set to be outside, like a picnic or a barbeque, and it started to rain. So, you had nowhere

  • indoors, you have no cover, so you had to call off the party. Or you got injured the

  • day before the party, so you had to call it off, cancel it. Sometimes people use it to

  • mean postpone, but usually it means cancel. So, "call off". Now, another way we can use

  • "call off" is, like, somebody... The police are coming at you. Let's say I'm a drug dealer.

  • Okay? And I have my drugs in my pockets. And the police coming with their dogs, and these

  • dogs are barking, and they're going crazy, and I say: "Whoa, call off your dogs." It

  • means: "Hold them back, restrain them, don't let them go forward." We can also use it in

  • the military. So, the soldiers are about to go to attack, and the... Whoever they're attacking

  • comes out with their hands up: "Whoa, call off your soldiers. We're giving up." It means:

  • "Don't attack. Hold back." Okay? So that's "call off".

  • Now, "call to" by itself doesn't really mean much. So, we say: "Call to action", for example.

  • A call to action... Now, all of you, obviously, you're online right now, you've been to many

  • websites. In many websites you will see: "Sign up", or "Buy now", or "Find out more",

  • "Learn more", "Get more information". All of these buttons that are asking you to do something,

  • these are called "calls to action". So, in that case, they're actually nouns, they're

  • not phrasal verbs. But if you... If you're the person who wrote the site, the website

  • or whatever, you... You want to call your viewers to action, you want them to do something.

  • Okay? "Call to action". You can also say: "Call to mind". Now, this has a very different

  • meaning. Let's say you're walking along the street, you hear some music somewhere, and

  • it just calls to mind that vacation you had in Hawaii last year. So, basically, like,

  • recall. You know the verb "recall", to bring to mind? You can also "call to mind", it means

  • the same idea. Okay?

  • And "call into" is... Works on the same principle. You're always going to call something into

  • something. Call... So, you're going to "call into question". Sorry, my "q" is not so pretty.

  • "Call into question". So, somebody wrote an article, or an essay, or a newspaper column,

  • and you read it and then you say: "No, no, something's not right, here." So, you call

  • the publisher and you call the information into question, or you call the writer into

  • question. It means you doubt. You think there's something wrong and you want to investigate

  • the problem with that article, or with the writer, him or herself. Okay, that's basically

  • it for "call into". Always call into question or call into some sort of doubt, etc. And

  • then again, "on call", ready to work at any time.

  • So, I hope these are clear enough. And if you need to practice them some more, please

  • go to the www.engvid.com website, there's a quiz there. You can also ask me questions.

  • And yeah, if you...

  • Please subscribe to my channel if you like this video, and see me again soon. Bye-bye.

Hi. Welcome back to www.engvid.com. I'm Adam. Today's lesson is, again, a phrasal lesson,

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