See also: cüd

English

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Pronunciation

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Adjective

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cued (comparative more cued, superlative most cued)

  1. Having or relying on a cue or cues.
    • 1995, Thom Hudson, James Dean Brown, Emily Detmer, Developing Prototypic Measures of Cross-cultural Pragmatics, page 3:
      The semi-direct measures were to involve a more cued response language laboratory DCT spoken sample and a free response face-to-tace structured interview.
    • 2012, Rania Foka, Soft Landing Learning, page 7:
      I vividly remember the case of a six year old boy, who although very cued otherwise, was unable to remember a word, let alone a sentence and he could not read even simple words for the first six months, which gave me the worst headache.
    • 2013, Wolfgang Schneider, Michael Pressley, Memory Development Between Two and Twenty:
      A comparison of the cued recall probabilities to the cue-word associative strength values revealed an especially interesting age difference.
    • 2018, Michael E. Lamb, Deirdre A. Brown, Irit Hershkowitz, Tell Me What Happened: Questioning Children About Abuse, page 122:
      For some analyses, Lamb, Sternberg, Orbach, Esplin, Stewart, and Mitchell (2003) distinguished between general invitations (e.g., "Tell me everything that happened") and cued invitations. Cued invitations were further categorized depending on whether they referenced events, actions, segments of time, or other topics.
    • 2024, Valuing Labour in Greco-Roman Antiquity, page 244:
      Overall, however, the Thysdrus pavement is, again like the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore painting, much more cued to the civic calendar than our mosaic from Gaul, both trhough its use of monthly labels and, more significantly, through the high number of monthly panels given over to ritual scenes (nine) as opposed to scenes depicting human beings performing actual labour (only three: June, July and September).

Derived terms

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Verb

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cued

  1. simple past and past participle of cue

Anagrams

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