phone-in

NOUN
  1. a program in which the audience participates by telephone
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How To Use phone-in In A Sentence

  • 'Any Answers' is a weekly phone-in on Radio 4.
  • A phone-in programme was in progress, and the irritation he immediately felt at the banalities being exchanged kept his adrenaline flowing. THE ENDLESS GAME
  • First we had the breast-beating from countless outraged callers to radio phone-ins.
  • You see, what I was doing was quite different from what that sad woman on the phone-in was doing. RESCUING ROSE
  • THERE isn't a player who is linked with any club these days who isn't first subjected to a seemingly endless scrutiny on message boards and radio phone-in shows.
  • A previous presidential television phone-in had a similarly happy ending when a giant Christmas tree arrived at a town near the Chinese border after a poignant plea from a child.
  • button on the radio, irritated by the inane phone-in that had just started. THE LAST TEMPTATION
  • Robert Elms' excellent phone-in show on BBC London often features such mundane yet satisfying acts of gaming in quotidian urban life.
  • In essence, what took place was this: Russell Brand, an on-off boyfriend of Georgina's at the time, was co-hosting a radio show with Jonathan Ross, and their phone-in guest was Sachs. It's time for you to talk
  • This development is not unconnected with the development of local radio and the popularity of the phone-in programme.
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