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Call |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Financial, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.07 sec. |
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To convoke or summon by public announcement; to request the appearance and participation of several people—such as a call of a jury to serve, a roll call, a call of public election, or a call of names of the members of a legislative body. In contract law, the demand for the payment of money according to the contract terms, usually by formal notice. As applied to corporation law, the demand of the board of directors that subscribers pay an installment or portion of the amount that is still owed on shares that they have agreed to buy. A call price is the price paid by a corporation for the redemption of its own Securities. In securities, a contract that gives a person the right to demand payment of a certain specified number of shares of stock at a stated price or upon a fixed date. call n. the demand by a corporation that a stockholder pay an installment or assessment on shares already owned. |
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Customers calling to order supplies or check on deliveries demand immediate attention, and suppliers like Connecticut-based Interstate Lumber must respond instantly to every phone call, which is why the 80-year-old, Greenwich, CT, retailer deployed a 3Com(R) voice and data network at its headquarters and remote sites. The electronic retailing pioneer is using CentreVu Advocate to handle consumers across the United States calling to order products. |
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