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wake-up call
wake-up call
1. A phone call that one schedules to be placed to one's hotel room in order to be woken up at a certain time. I set an alarm and scheduled a wake-up call so there's no way I oversleep for the first conference session tomorrow.
2. An event that triggers a sense of urgency or the motiviation to make a change. Primarily heard in US, Australia. Harold's sudden chest pain was the wake-up call he needed to finally see his doctor. That terrible car accident was just the wake-up call I needed to quit my boring office job and start acting again.
wake-up call
A portentous event, report, or situation that brings an issue to immediate attention. For example, The rise in unemployment has given a wake-up call to state governments, or The success of the online subscription is a wake-up call to publishers. This metaphoric term originated in the second half of the 1900s for a telephone call arranged in advance to awaken a sleeper, especially in a hotel. Its figurative use dates from about 1990.
Common Names:
| Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
| Grete | | GRE-tə (German) | German, Danish, Norwegian |
| Amenemhet | | ah-mə-NEM-het (English) | Ancient Egyptian |
| ĐUrĐIca | | JOOR-jee-tsah | Croatian |
| Minke | | MIN-kə | Frisian, Dutch |
| Mahendra | | - | Indian, Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati, Sanskrit |
| Alanna | | ə-LAN-ə | English |