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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a call hall" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to refer to a specific type of location or event, but without context, it is unclear when it could be used.
Example: "We gathered in a call hall to discuss the upcoming conference."
Alternatives: "a conference room" or "a meeting hall".
Exact(1)
"I got a call," Hall said.
Similar(58)
On the other head, there is Pillo 1, a large, bouncy, latex-foam model from a company called Hall Innovations ($199).
These are the stories, I hope, that might form a collection called "Hall of Small Mammals".
After the cyclotron was retired, in 1965, pieces of it were carted off to the Smithsonian Institution for an exhibit called "Hall of Nuclear Energy".
His self-titled RockPod, with winching points, a watertight access hatch and windows built into it by Hancock, will be fixed to one of the few flat points on Rockall, a slender area called Hall's Ledge.
Enterprise software company Atlassian also earlier this month bought a team chat service called Hall to beef up its HipChat product.
Brown's staff was not happy with the poem at the time and called Hall "a partisan poet," The Boston Globe said.
She operated it as a rooming-house, and a lodger came to it called Hall who became the landlady's swain.
Pete Piringer, a spokesman for Washington Fire and Emergency Medical Services, said that the department's hazardous materials team responded to a call at the dormitory, Harbin Hall, around 6 15 a.m.
This phenomenon is called Hall effect.
In a statement, the air force said the X-37B will test a new electric engine called a Hall thruster, described as an "electric propulsion device that produces thrust by ionizing and accelerating a noble gas, usually xenon".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com