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callback
[kawl-bak]
noun
an act of calling back.
a summoning of workers back to work after a layoff.
a summoning of an employee back to work after working hours, as for emergency business.
a request to a performer who has auditioned for a role, booking, or the like to return for another audition.
a return telephone call.
an allusion to a joke made earlier in the same comedy act or show.
The kitten yelling “Quiet!” at the end was a callback to earlier in the episode when the two normally silent brothers shouted it.
adjective
of or relating to a return telephone call.
Please leave a callback number.
Word History and Origins
Origin of callback1
Example Sentences
Yet, each callback has been costumed enough not to feel like a parody of a parody.
The film is a narrative retread of its predecessor, packed to the brim with callbacks and cameos that seem intended to spark a brief conversation online before burning out entirely, not unlike most Netflix originals.
The script works in as many callbacks as possible: spooky mannequins under plastic sheeting, tacky parade floats with giant fiberglass clams, Hewitt hollering her memorable line: “What are you waiting for?”
After years of growing peace, the attack was a callback to Colombia's most violent years, when cartel-ordered assassinations were a common occurrence.
June returns to the Waterford home where she records her monologue, a callback to what we hear in the very first episode.
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