0 past simple and past participle of call --
1 to give someone or something a name, or to know or address someone by a particular name: --
Tom's worried that if he wears glasses at school the other children will call him names.
I wish he wouldn't keep calling me "dear" - it's so patronizing!
What's her new novel called?
His real name is Jonathan, but they've always called him Johnny.
What's that actor called that we saw in the film last night?
They've called the twins Edward and Thomas.
3 to consider someone or something to be: --
4 to say something in a loud voice, especially in order to attract someone's attention, or (of animals) to make a loud, high sound, especially to another animal: --
5 to ask someone to come to you: --
He called this the "aspect graph" or "visual potential" of the tomato.
The latter operation is called the 'sparking' of parallelism and is used in different variants in many parallel languages.
The problem domain is typically called the target of the analogy.
Single-legged hopping robotics research similar results, when the spring-mass type vertical hopper was controlled with a controller, called periodic forcing controller.
The set of all initial conditions that ultimately evolve to a stable fixed point is called the basin of attraction of that fixed point.
The first part, called an action (or system) description, specifies the transition diagram representing possible trajectories of the system.
They explain many differences (including some structural ones) between languages which have been called ' 'mixed' '.
It may be called the structural orientation of the proof-structure.