call button

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

A pedestrian call button.

call button (plural call buttons)

  1. A button used to request assistance.
    • 2008 April 17, Joyce Wadler, “Don’t Hate Me Because I’m Solvent”, in The New York Times[1]:
      Their feeling, anachronistic as the servants’ call button in their dining room, is that if you don’t have the money for something, you don’t buy it.
    • 2013 April 4, Celine Gounder, “Medical Emergencies at 40,000 Feet”, in The Atlantic[2]:
      I was asleep, the plane dark as we flew over the Atlantic on our way from Johannesburg to São Paulo, when a familiar page came over the intercom: "Ladies and gentlemen, sorry to wake you. If there is a doctor on board, please hit your call button."
  2. A button used to request some form of mechanical service.
    1. A button used to request a walk signal at a pedestrian crossing.
      • 2021 February 26, Hannah Eason, “Richmond to install new traffic signals for pedestrians, bicyclists at crosswalks”, in NBC 12[3], Richmond, Va.: WWBT:
        The Pedestrian Hybrid Beacon is designed to help pedestrians and bicyclists safely cross busy, multi-lane or high-speed streets. The beacon consists of two red lenses above a single yellow lens. The lenses remain “dark” until a pedestrian pushes the call button to activate the beacon.
    2. A button used to summon an elevator.
      • 2000 June 11, Mark Wallace, “Tech 2010: #29 Wait No More; The Elevator You Never Have to Wait For”, in The New York Times[4], section 6, page 96:
        No more staring at closed elevator doors, repeatedly pressing a call button in frustration.

Synonyms[edit]