Unit 12 On the Telephone
Make a (phone) call to use the telephone
USAGE NOTE: Adjectives such as important and quick are often added to this idiom.
▪ The manager went to ger office to make an important phone call.
▪ Jonah had to make a quick call before he left home.
Be on the phone to be using the telephone
Opposite meaning: be off the phone
▪ Mr. Quintana is on the phone right now. She’ll be available in a moment.
▪ As soon as I’m off the phone, I’ll check the imformation for you.
Over the phone by using the telephone
Also: on the phone
USAGE NOTE: These expressions are used to show exactly how contact between two people is made. They are used with verbs such as give, talk, and speak, but not be.
▪ Instead of sending a fax, the assistant gave her boss the information over the phone.
▪ The doctor and his patient spoke on the phone about the medical problem.
Call up to telephone someone
Also: give someone a call
GRAMMAR NOTE: Call up is separable.
▪ You should call up Carmen before she calls Carlos up.
▪ Why haven’t you given her a call yet?
Hold on to wait for assistance on the telephone
Related form: on hold
▪ The relephone operator asked the caller to hold on while she transferred the call
▪ I was on hold for several minutes because the clerks were busy with customers.
Off the hook not placed properly on the base unit of the telephone
Opposite meaning: on the hook
USAGE NOTE: This idiom means that the telephone handset is not properly placed on the base unit. The opposite form on the hook is less often used.
▪ Carl left the telephone off the hook so that he wouldn’t be bothered by any calls
▪ Please put the phone back on the hook so that we can be reached.
Call back to telephone someone who has just called and left a message, to call again
Also: return someone’s call
GRAMMAR NOTE: Call back is separable, so the object may follow the verb.
▪ Craig called back Alice as soon as he got her message.
▪ However, when he called her back, she wasn’t at home.
▪ He left a message for ger to return his call.
▪ I asked Frank to call me back because I was too busy to talk.
Hang up to put the telephone handset back on the base unit at the end of a call
USAGE NOTE: This idiom may be used with or without an object. The idiom is separable if an object is used.
▪ The salesperson shouldn’t have hung the phone up before I could ask another question.
▪ Todd was enjoying his talk with an old friend so much that he didn’t want to hang up.
Crank call a telephone call intended only to annoy or bother someone
▪ Sometimes small children use the telephone to make crank calls.
▪ Kyle hung up the phone right away when she realized that it was a crank call.
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