call on

Verb

 * 1) To visit (a person); to pay a call to.
 * 2) To select (a student in a classroom, etc.) to provide an answer.
 * 3) (also call upon) To request or ask something of (a person); to select for a task.
 * 4) * 1909 October 14, Edward Kimball Hall, speech, in The Inauguration of Ernest Fox Nichols, D.Sc., LL.D., as president of Dartmouth College, The Rumford Press, page 88:
 * The alma mater had again called on her sons in her hour of need and again they had responded.
 * 1) * 2002, Bruno Coppieters, “Legitimate Authority”, chapter 2 of Bruno Coppieters and Nick Fotion (editors), Moral Constraints on War: Principles and Cases, Lexington Books, ISBN 978-0-7391-0437-8, page 46:
 * De Gaulle called on the military to break with their hierarchical superiors and on the other French citizens to distance themselves from their government.
 * 1) (also call upon) To have recourse to.
 * 2)  To correct; to point out an error or untruth.
 * The alma mater had again called on her sons in her hour of need and again they had responded.
 * 1) * 2002, Bruno Coppieters, “Legitimate Authority”, chapter 2 of Bruno Coppieters and Nick Fotion (editors), Moral Constraints on War: Principles and Cases, Lexington Books, ISBN 978-0-7391-0437-8, page 46:
 * De Gaulle called on the military to break with their hierarchical superiors and on the other French citizens to distance themselves from their government.
 * 1) (also call upon) To have recourse to.
 * 2)  To correct; to point out an error or untruth.
 * 1) (also call upon) To have recourse to.
 * 2)  To correct; to point out an error or untruth.
 * 1)  To correct; to point out an error or untruth.
 * 1)  To correct; to point out an error or untruth.
 * 1)  To correct; to point out an error or untruth.

Translations

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