call out

/K AO1 L AW1 T/
verb
  1. 1

    To specify, especially in detail.

    โ€œThey call out 304 stainless steel in the drawing, but the part was made from aluminum.โ€

  2. 2

    To order into service; to summon into service.

    โ€œThe Governor called out the National Guard.โ€

    syn:summon
  3. 3

    To yell out; to vocalize audibly; announce.

  4. 4

    To challenge, criticize, denounce.

    โ€œHe was very insulting. Finally Jack called him out and shut him up.โ€

  5. 5

    (New Jersey, New York, Connecticut) To contact one's workplace and announce that one is unable to attend work. Regionalism short for call out sick; much more commonly: call in sick.

noun
  1. 1

    (communication) An outgoing telephone call.

  2. 2

    An invitation to fight; the act of one child calling out another.

  3. 3

    (graphic layout) A pull quote: an excerpt from an article (such as in a news magazine) that is duplicated in a large font alongside the article so as to grab a reader's attention and indicate the article's topic.

  4. 4

    A summons to someone designated as being on call.

    โ€œI had to pay for the callout of the plumber after the pipe burst.โ€

  5. 5

    A meeting or rally held in order to find interested participants, e.g. for an activity or sports team.

    โ€œSo many people attended the basketball callout that the coach decided to form two teams.โ€

  6. 6

    An annotation that pertains to a specific location in a body of text or a graphic, and that is visually linked to that location by a mark or a matching pair of marks.

  7. 7

    The act of calling out from work, i.e. announcing that one cannot attend.

Source: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/call%20out, https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/callout