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单词 cue
释义

cue1

nounPlural cues kjuːkju
  • 1A thing said or done that serves as a signal to an actor or other performer to enter or to begin their speech or performance.

    (给演员或其他演出者的)提示,暗示

    she had not yet been given her cue to come out on to the dais
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Everyone else seems to be waiting for an offstage cue before they perform, as if unsure of what to do or say next.
    • He looked toward the door and cleared his throat obnoxiously, as if someone had missed his or her cue to enter.
    • Having the orchestra play straight through these groups of cues keeps their performance really sharp and also saves time overall.
    • Children don't understand many of the common cues in a live performance.
    • The colors and moods combine with the actors' performances and haunting musical cues to create a slightly surreal atmosphere.
    • During a performance, musical cues and sung instructions are given by the leaders, requiring constant attention from the others.
    • Actors miss their cues, the dubbing is just out of synch, the sound effects are too loud and don't match up with the action on-screen.
    • There is a generous amount of sound cues but no speech in any form, since the developers have elected to remove things like unit acknowledgement.
    • He needs a more subtle way of looking for his musical cues from the monitor at the front of the stage.
    • Meanwhile, on the field, Stacy waited for her cue to begin singing.
    • The actors flurry about backstage, hissing, thumping and gesticulating wildly between cues.
    • The girl takes a cue and begins dancing, keeping almost perfect beat to the tune.
    • This fosters a kind of sensitivity toward the body language of the actors and the musical cues in the narrative.
    • Time passes slowly as the cast expend most of their energy on dodgy accents, very little on the performances and none at all on picking up cues.
    • Alcohol may serve as a cue, making certain behaviors more accessible and likely.
    • My next show had two light cues and no sound cues.
    • Safety cues or performance references must be stated positively if you expect your class to improve their skills and continue attending.
    • The Mayor, not heeding his cue, began his speech early and failed to mention the conference and exhibition sponsors.
    • Both technical aspects were designed effectively, although unfortunately on this opening night both sound and lighting had missed cues and glitches.
    • We already had had disasters with actors losing their cue when their partner skipped a line, or having black outs with no one on stage able to cut in.
    Synonyms
    signal, sign, indication, prompt, reminder, prompting
    nod, word
    hint, suggestion, intimation
    North American informal high sign
    Physiology zeitgeber
    1. 1.1 A signal for action.
      (行动的)信号
      his success was the cue for the rest of Fleet Street to forge ahead

      他的成功是其余英国报界稳步前进的一个信号。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Clinic visits may serve as important cues to action that serve as a basis for behavior change.
      • As if this was the cue to begin, all four started to transform.
      • The digit served as a cue to make a guess in the probability-guessing task.
      • The act of the secondary observer writing down an observation when the primary observer has not indicated a detection can serve as a cue to the primary observer.
      • The trend snowballed with many industries taking the cue and entering this market as they found it difficult to revive their industries due to various reasons.
      • A handwritten tick appears above the word death, but the report has no number inserted in it, in spite of the obvious cue to enter a number in the specified space.
      • The primary care physician's emotional response to a patient can serve as an early cue to pursue a somatization diagnosis.
      • That was the cue for Paul, who has been criticised at times this season, to take centre stage, and he answered those critics in no uncertain terms.
      • The plan should list peak flow meter readings or specific symptoms that will serve as your cue to go to the ER.
      • This was my cue to begin a slow approach with the camera, all the time being eyed warily by the triggerfish.
      • If that sounds painfully scary, you could just say you'll e-mail him later, which is an obvious cue for him to offer up his address.
      • It was the cue for many of the home fans to depart.
      • This was the cue for a hold up which lasted around five minutes as players, mentors and fans pleaded with the referee to reverse his decision.
      • Instead, it was the cue for England's forwards to take charge.
      • Be advised that each species responds to specific environmental cues to begin migration and may take flight ahead of schedule.
      • And in this smart pub, where a Glaswegian salad is the order of the day, that's the cue for another round of reminiscing.
      • This was the cue for the home team to get their act together and they did.
      • Two wires served to deliver electrical cues - one each to the brain cells associated with the rats left and right whiskers, respectively.
      • This served as the cue for sections of the media north of the border to lament the fact that a similar progressive outlook did not exist in this country.
      • Then, taking their obvious cue, they began to brawl.
    2. 1.2 A circumstance or piece of information which aids the memory in retrieving details not recalled spontaneously.
      (帮助唤起记忆的)起提示作用的情况
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In fact, in some cases corroborative evidence serves as the retrieval cue for the repressed memory.
      • The context acts as a cue to retrieve the memory of events that occurred in its presence.
      • Religious ideas and practices will not form part of social identification in the absence of cues and memories.
      • The prospective memory cues occurred in 12 trials out of the total 112 trials.
      • The results of this study also demonstrate that gestures can be external retrieval cues for a memory event.
      • However, we provided no cues during recall in the experiments in the present study.
      • This not only identifies what is considered high in fiber but provides a cue to aid in recall.
      • Any cinema studies student will be able to go into great detail about all the cues put into cinema to make us understand that something not actually represented is going on.
      • In this study, the use of language specific retrieval cues did not yield language-specific recall.
      • Retrieval cues do not bring about a complete memory of some events because most of the event was not encoded.
      • Developing such cognitive networks provides more cues for recall and makes the connections more stable and durable over time, making them easier to remember.
      • Variety maximises the number of retrieval cues for recall of information.
      • The boxes were removed from sight because previous research has shown that location acts as a cue to memory.
      • The use of empirically based cues to mistaken memories was similar for both inaccurate and accurate judges.
      • These kinds of cues are generally effective when a free recall test - a memory search without cues - starts to come up empty.
      • Of course, the pictures also provided additional cues for recall.
      • He admitted defeat and asked the usher if she'd seen Cecelia, offering the turquoise turban as a cue to memory.
      • In the absence of explicit retrieval cues, pair recall will be facilitated by factors that promote unitization of each pair.
      • Another experiment examined uncertainty about memory rather than sensory cues.
      • You lose glasses and keys either because your brain never encoded an event or piece of information or because a cue devised to trigger your memory failed.
    3. 1.3Psychology A feature of something perceived that is used in the brain's interpretation of the perception.
      〔心理〕线索
      expectancy is communicated both by auditory and visual cues

      期望既可以通过听觉线索也可以通过视觉线索得到传递。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • In waking life, the best that we can do is interpret overt cues and then attempt to understand a person's intentions and predict their actions, for which dreams offer such a venue.
      • Clothing and decoration provide important cues to aid interpersonal and intrapersonal communication.
      • Lacking auditory and visual cues, the e-mail message or newsgroup post can be productively ambiguous in tone.
      • Because of this selectivity, the nurses pay less attention to irrelevant cues and use fewer information cues overall.
      • But very sensitive hearing is necessary to hear all the acoustic cues in speech sounds.
    4. 1.4 A hint or indication about how to behave in particular circumstances.
      (对在特定情况下应以何种方式行事的)示意,暗示
      my teacher joked about such attitudes and I followed her cue

      老师开玩笑地谈起那些态度,我领会了她的意思。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Was it a case of a people merely following the cues of their leader?
      • But didn't go any further until he had taken some cue from her that it was okay.
      • The experimenter effect is a term used to describe any of a number of subtle cues or signals from an experimenter that affect the performance or response of subjects in the experiment.
      • We were the ones who did not know the protocols - but followed the few cues.
      • Consequently, these characteristics may serve as cues that are used by respondents to guide their interactions with survey interviewers.
      • He needed always to be on the lookout for subtle cues indicating how his mother would behave.
  • 2mass noun A facility for playing through an audio or video recording very rapidly until a desired starting point is reached.

    选听(或选看)键

verbcues, cueing, cued, cuing kjuːkju
[with object]
  • 1Give a cue to or for.

    给…提示(或暗示)

    Ros and Guil, cued by Hamlet, also bow deeply

    罗斯和吉尔在哈姆雷特的暗示下也深深地鞠了个躬。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A tinny soundtrack is used to cue the arrival of dramatic tension - a job that is better left to performers.
    • Ok I embellish but that's my interpretation when she cues the violins.
    • The cast is great, but everything is so cued, signed, and anticipated that the movie makes me sick at times.
    • On set, instead of saying ‘Action’, he cued his actors by firing a gun.
    • So it cues you that something's around and you try and contain that.
    • It cues our hate to keep us watching, like a bullfighter taunting a bull: waving red to draw our attention and anger.
    • In the earlier days, I wanted the music to cue you almost like a curtain.
    • A group of teenagers have taken it upon themselves to cue a new snooker hall for the people of the town.
    • Like laugh tracks, they cue our emotional responses, but they also disguise their coerciveness by making us feel included.
    • Our vast inside sources cued us in about this extraordinary gentleman.
    • So, not content with reducing my audience to laughter with my first attempt, I cued the musicians to start over.
    • As the game shifts in tone from the humorous to the dark and back again, this production feels compelled to cue the audience with an almost comic earnestness.
    • The musicians sit scattered at both ends of the stage, warming up for an improv exercise in which they cue dancers to stop dancing by quickly interrupting their movement with music.
    • Note the telling musical score, anticipating events, cueing the audience as to when to be scared, assuming we cannot figure that out ourselves.
    • When cued by the end of a song or solo, the room would erupt into enthusiastic applause and ‘woos,’ not to mention the standing ovations that brought both concerts to an end.
    • Some lines in his movies sound as if they were written to cue his reactions, and they are the more memorable for that.
    • A slicker actor would have cued revulsion in children, but here the icky inevitability of movie clinches had been thwarted.
    • Unity was the message; cue loud applause from almost the entire room.
    • He won't speak to the press unless an overture of fanned notes cues him.
    • But when he goes down to the valley, it's the same two sentences in Spanish, and then they cue the mariachis.
    1. 1.1 Act as a prompt or reminder.
      提醒
      have a list of needs and questions on paper to cue you

      将需要和问题列在纸上以提醒你。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • If I forget a line, they're not going to cue me, you know?
      • I can be cued back through patient prompting, but it takes me a while, and it might not last.
      • This may include cueing or prompting, questioning, modeling, telling, or discussing.
      • Make your reminder cues both informative and obvious.
      • For recall to be the measure that most appropriately captures the process of shopping and product choice, shoppers would remember the brand name without being cued or reminded.
  • 2Set a piece of audio or video equipment in readiness to play (a particular part of the recorded material)

    使录音(或录像)设备处于播放(某部分录音或录像资料)的准备状态

    there was a pause while she cued up the next tape
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The director called for the clip, but, oops, it wasn't cued.
    • See, this is what they try and teach you in school, but kids know it already if they're on their decks, cueing records up and learning to count them in.
    • A manager who has to train distant new hires can directly present the orientation session using the video/audio streaming feed, cueing slides showing detailed information and taking questions from the audience in real time.
    • Streaming-music sites cue up an amazing playlist of songs, a variety of features and plenty of customer stickiness for advertisers.
    • To listen to a storm, cue up this DVD and give the volume knob a sharp, clockwise twist.
    • I suppose we are meant to include the guy who cues her vocal track as part of the band.
    • If you own the tape, its probably cued up to this piece.
    • Full screen graphics can be cued in and cued up by using two buttons.
    • Actually controlling the quality of the audio and getting it cued up is the responsibility of the studio manager, effectively a sound engineer, who prepares audio clips for broadcast.
    • Instead of having to cue up a tape and set up the mix I could just listen.
    • Press the same button again to put the camera shot back on, and then you would press a button next to it to cue up the next graphic.
    • The risers are rolled in; lights are fixed, sound is cued and video monitors are put in place.
    • Since many of the program's participants had never played a record, let alone cued one up, they began by first explaining how a record makes sound on a turntable and then showing them how to handle and cue it.
    • Because recorded motion can be cued and played back live, the puppeteer can layer a performance, as one would produce a multitrack audio recording.
    • He seemed to have been having difficulty taking out our track and cueing the next set of music and it caused tremendous problems for us because the band was going in fits and starts.
    • The tape with the self-righteous denunciations has been taken off the reel while the new tape, full of self-righteous media navel-gazing, is cued up.
    • I think that's a good goal to shoot for, but I don't necessarily agree that everything has to be cued up in one master list to achieve it.
    • He fixes my ‘broken’ tape recorder and cues it faster than I can write this sentence.
    • The snickering stopped when I realized - cue melodramatic organ music - that the creepy kid was me.
    • When I stick it in the drive again an hour or even a year later, it cues it back up to where I left off.

Phrases

  • on cue

    • At the correct moment.

      恰好在这时候

      right on cue the door opened

      门就在此时此刻打开了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Barely had he collapsed when two others rushed to his aid, sweeping him into an ambulance that sped forward on cue from a side street.
      • At that very moment as if on cue, somewhere in the distance a wolf let out a menacing howl.
      • As if on cue, a door on the far side of the room opened, and a voice called.
      • On cue, Ashby entered with a cart possessing several trays from which delicious aromas rose.
      • Right on cue, fish began to show, and the water suddenly came alive.
      • As if right on cue, the door to the parlor opened just then and another servant, a young man, entered.
      • The pages turn right on cue and the pictures are evocative enough that the story tells itself just by listening.
      • TV coaches can teach a candidate how to smile on cue and even how to feign sincerity.
      • On cue, the creature began running towards her, sword drawn and red eyes frighteningly wild.
      • They ate in silence, and they appeared to finish their food together, as if on cue.
  • take one's cue from

    • Follow the example or advice of.

      学…的样;听…的劝告

      McGee did not move and Julia took her cue from him

      麦吉没有动,朱莉娅学着他的样。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • If I understand it aright, objective calculation and measurement take their cue from - and ultimately serve - circumspective involvement in the world.
      • Everyone else in the cast takes their cue from and builds off this edge.
      • These influences pale in significance however, when compared to the massive list of performers who took their cues from him.
      • Yeah, and most people don't take their cue from that.
      • I took a cue from her and began serving the customers' breakfast.
      • In the 1960s and 70s we took our cue from what was happening worldwide.
      • He takes his cue from what they are doing, and I stand in awe of how often he is correct in forecasting what they will do.
      • The conductor of the symphony orchestra does not control the activity of the players, but they do follow the score and take their cue from the conductor's directions.
      • Until then try to take your cues from how he behaves both publicly and privately, and don't be afraid to ask questions!
      • As with the overall design of the house, details take their cues from the barn.

Origin

Mid 16th century: of unknown origin.

  • queue from late 16th century:

    Think of a long queue of people stretching back from a ticket office or bus stop. It looks a bit like an animal's tail, and this is the literal meaning of the word, which comes from French and was based on Latin cauda ‘tail’. Queue was originally used as a heraldic term for the tail of an animal. In the 18th and 19th centuries it also referred to a pigtail, sometimes spelt cue, and source of the long thin rod cue (mid 16th century) used in snooker. It came to describe a line of people in the mid 19th century.

Rhymes

accrue, adieu, ado, anew, Anjou, aperçu, askew, ballyhoo, bamboo, bedew, bestrew, billet-doux, blew, blue, boo, boohoo, brew, buckaroo, canoe, chew, clew, clou, clue, cock-a-doodle-doo, cockatoo, construe, coo, Corfu, coup, crew, Crewe, cru, déjà vu, derring-do, dew, didgeridoo, do, drew, due, endue, ensue, eschew, feu, few, flew, flu, flue, foreknew, glue, gnu, goo, grew, halloo, hereto, hew, Hindu, hitherto, how-do-you-do, hue, Hugh, hullabaloo, imbrue, imbue, jackaroo, Jew, kangaroo, Karroo, Kathmandu, kazoo, Kiangsu, knew, Kru, K2, kung fu, Lahu, Lanzhou, Lao-tzu, lasso, lieu, loo, Lou, Manchu, mangetout, mew, misconstrue, miscue, moo, moue, mu, nardoo, new, non-U, nu, ooh, outdo, outflew, outgrew, peekaboo, Peru, pew, plew, Poitou, pooh, pooh-pooh, potoroo, pursue, queue, revue, roo, roux, rue, Selous, set-to, shampoo, shih-tzu, shoe, shoo, shrew, Sioux, skean dhu, skew, skidoo, slew, smew, snafu, sou, spew, sprue, stew, strew, subdue, sue, switcheroo, taboo, tattoo, thereto, thew, threw, thro, through, thru, tickety-boo, Timbuktu, tiramisu, to, to-do, too, toodle-oo, true, true-blue, tu-whit tu-whoo, two, vendue, view, vindaloo, virtu, wahoo, wallaroo, Waterloo, well-to-do, whereto, whew, who, withdrew, woo, Wu, yew, you, zoo

cue2

nounPlural cues kjuːkju
  • A long straight tapering wooden rod for striking the ball in snooker, billiards, etc.

    (斯诺克、台球等的)球杆

    Example sentencesExamples
    • When the cue hits the object ball it will bend the tangent line back away from the corner.
    • Shoot straight at the object ball, striking the cue ball one cue tip below center.
    • Following centuries of Billiards dominated by England and France, during the 19th century a third country became obsessed with the sport of cues and balls.
    • Also banned from cabins is sporting equipment such as cricket bats, tennis racquets, golf clubs and snooker cues.
    • He just grabbed his cue and began lining up his shot, looking incredibly sullen.
    • Prizes for winners and runners-up are new snooker cues.
    • Bend forward into a shooting position and see if you feel you can sight straight down your cue.
    • This game is more than just a game of balls and pockets and cues.
    • Pool is supposed to be an easy starting point for cue sports.
    • England was resistant to this change for some reason - the cue was available in billiard rooms by 1734, but did not gain real popularity until around 1800.
    • A quick nudge of the cue and the 4 ball was in, center pocket.
    • Other items include a snooker cue signed by top stars, an England under 21s signed match ball and Bath rugby shirts and balls signed by players.
    • Unlike, say, a tennis racket or cricket bat, a snooker cue is thought irreplaceable by its owner.
    • At one stage he went out armed with a snooker cue, but went back inside.
    • The usual effects can be heard such as the cue hitting the ball and such.
    • Perhaps his vanity had caused him to only use a snooker cue chalk once and then throw it away.
    • If I strike a billiard ball with a cue stick, I effect a transfer of [physical] energy.
    • It got worse when, attempting to summon a waiter for more wine, I mistakenly outbid everyone in the raffle for a snooker cue signed by innumerable world champions.
    • Every time I screw my cue together, my goal is to be a better player when I unscrew it.
    • One man suffered penknife stab wounds to his back and another was hit around the head with a snooker cue.
verbcues, cueing, cued, cuing kjuːkju
[no object]
  • Use a cue to strike the ball.

    用球杆击球

    Mark cued well early on
    Example sentencesExamples
    • But I started cueing well and Alan couldn't put me away,’ he said.
    • I am cueing well, but every now and then I make an unbelievable howler.
    • ‘Stephen deserved to win it - he was cueing beautifully and produced his best form when it mattered,’ said the six-times champion.
    • And the three times Regal Masters champion was soon cueing superbly.
    • ‘I missed a few easy balls today but I am cueing brilliantly,’ he said.
    • The Welshman just about deserved to edge ahead after cueing so well in the early stages of the match, although his game dipped after the interval.
    • It gives me time get back to the way I was cueing before Sheffield.

Derivatives

  • cueist

  • noun ˈkjuːɪstˈkjuəst
    rare
    • A person who plays snooker, pool, or billiards.

      Alex was a tremendous cueist when he was playing

Origin

Mid 18th century (denoting a long plait or pigtail): variant of queue.

cue1

nounkyo͞okju
  • 1A thing said or done that serves as a signal to an actor or other performer to enter or to begin their speech or performance.

    (给演员或其他演出者的)提示,暗示

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Children don't understand many of the common cues in a live performance.
    • Alcohol may serve as a cue, making certain behaviors more accessible and likely.
    • Meanwhile, on the field, Stacy waited for her cue to begin singing.
    • Safety cues or performance references must be stated positively if you expect your class to improve their skills and continue attending.
    • We already had had disasters with actors losing their cue when their partner skipped a line, or having black outs with no one on stage able to cut in.
    • Time passes slowly as the cast expend most of their energy on dodgy accents, very little on the performances and none at all on picking up cues.
    • This fosters a kind of sensitivity toward the body language of the actors and the musical cues in the narrative.
    • Having the orchestra play straight through these groups of cues keeps their performance really sharp and also saves time overall.
    • The girl takes a cue and begins dancing, keeping almost perfect beat to the tune.
    • The actors flurry about backstage, hissing, thumping and gesticulating wildly between cues.
    • The colors and moods combine with the actors' performances and haunting musical cues to create a slightly surreal atmosphere.
    • Actors miss their cues, the dubbing is just out of synch, the sound effects are too loud and don't match up with the action on-screen.
    • There is a generous amount of sound cues but no speech in any form, since the developers have elected to remove things like unit acknowledgement.
    • Both technical aspects were designed effectively, although unfortunately on this opening night both sound and lighting had missed cues and glitches.
    • He looked toward the door and cleared his throat obnoxiously, as if someone had missed his or her cue to enter.
    • He needs a more subtle way of looking for his musical cues from the monitor at the front of the stage.
    • The Mayor, not heeding his cue, began his speech early and failed to mention the conference and exhibition sponsors.
    • Everyone else seems to be waiting for an offstage cue before they perform, as if unsure of what to do or say next.
    • During a performance, musical cues and sung instructions are given by the leaders, requiring constant attention from the others.
    • My next show had two light cues and no sound cues.
    Synonyms
    signal, sign, indication, prompt, reminder, prompting
    1. 1.1 A signal for action.
      (行动的)信号
      any conversational lull was my cue for asking a question
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This served as the cue for sections of the media north of the border to lament the fact that a similar progressive outlook did not exist in this country.
      • The primary care physician's emotional response to a patient can serve as an early cue to pursue a somatization diagnosis.
      • That was the cue for Paul, who has been criticised at times this season, to take centre stage, and he answered those critics in no uncertain terms.
      • Two wires served to deliver electrical cues - one each to the brain cells associated with the rats left and right whiskers, respectively.
      • And in this smart pub, where a Glaswegian salad is the order of the day, that's the cue for another round of reminiscing.
      • Clinic visits may serve as important cues to action that serve as a basis for behavior change.
      • The act of the secondary observer writing down an observation when the primary observer has not indicated a detection can serve as a cue to the primary observer.
      • The trend snowballed with many industries taking the cue and entering this market as they found it difficult to revive their industries due to various reasons.
      • This was the cue for the home team to get their act together and they did.
      • It was the cue for many of the home fans to depart.
      • As if this was the cue to begin, all four started to transform.
      • This was the cue for a hold up which lasted around five minutes as players, mentors and fans pleaded with the referee to reverse his decision.
      • Be advised that each species responds to specific environmental cues to begin migration and may take flight ahead of schedule.
      • This was my cue to begin a slow approach with the camera, all the time being eyed warily by the triggerfish.
      • If that sounds painfully scary, you could just say you'll e-mail him later, which is an obvious cue for him to offer up his address.
      • Instead, it was the cue for England's forwards to take charge.
      • Then, taking their obvious cue, they began to brawl.
      • The plan should list peak flow meter readings or specific symptoms that will serve as your cue to go to the ER.
      • A handwritten tick appears above the word death, but the report has no number inserted in it, in spite of the obvious cue to enter a number in the specified space.
      • The digit served as a cue to make a guess in the probability-guessing task.
    2. 1.2 A piece of information or circumstance that aids the memory in retrieving details not recalled spontaneously.
      (帮助唤起记忆的)起提示作用的情况
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The use of empirically based cues to mistaken memories was similar for both inaccurate and accurate judges.
      • You lose glasses and keys either because your brain never encoded an event or piece of information or because a cue devised to trigger your memory failed.
      • Any cinema studies student will be able to go into great detail about all the cues put into cinema to make us understand that something not actually represented is going on.
      • The boxes were removed from sight because previous research has shown that location acts as a cue to memory.
      • He admitted defeat and asked the usher if she'd seen Cecelia, offering the turquoise turban as a cue to memory.
      • In the absence of explicit retrieval cues, pair recall will be facilitated by factors that promote unitization of each pair.
      • These kinds of cues are generally effective when a free recall test - a memory search without cues - starts to come up empty.
      • Retrieval cues do not bring about a complete memory of some events because most of the event was not encoded.
      • The context acts as a cue to retrieve the memory of events that occurred in its presence.
      • In this study, the use of language specific retrieval cues did not yield language-specific recall.
      • Another experiment examined uncertainty about memory rather than sensory cues.
      • This not only identifies what is considered high in fiber but provides a cue to aid in recall.
      • Of course, the pictures also provided additional cues for recall.
      • The prospective memory cues occurred in 12 trials out of the total 112 trials.
      • Variety maximises the number of retrieval cues for recall of information.
      • In fact, in some cases corroborative evidence serves as the retrieval cue for the repressed memory.
      • Developing such cognitive networks provides more cues for recall and makes the connections more stable and durable over time, making them easier to remember.
      • The results of this study also demonstrate that gestures can be external retrieval cues for a memory event.
      • However, we provided no cues during recall in the experiments in the present study.
      • Religious ideas and practices will not form part of social identification in the absence of cues and memories.
    3. 1.3Psychology A feature of something perceived that is used in the brain's interpretation of the perception.
      〔心理〕线索
      expectancy is communicated both by auditory and visual cues

      期望既可以通过听觉线索也可以通过视觉线索得到传递。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • But very sensitive hearing is necessary to hear all the acoustic cues in speech sounds.
      • Because of this selectivity, the nurses pay less attention to irrelevant cues and use fewer information cues overall.
      • In waking life, the best that we can do is interpret overt cues and then attempt to understand a person's intentions and predict their actions, for which dreams offer such a venue.
      • Lacking auditory and visual cues, the e-mail message or newsgroup post can be productively ambiguous in tone.
      • Clothing and decoration provide important cues to aid interpersonal and intrapersonal communication.
    4. 1.4 A hint or indication about how to behave in particular circumstances.
      (对在特定情况下应以何种方式行事的)示意,暗示
      my teacher joked about such attitudes and I followed her cue

      老师开玩笑地谈起那些态度,我领会了她的意思。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • He needed always to be on the lookout for subtle cues indicating how his mother would behave.
      • Was it a case of a people merely following the cues of their leader?
      • Consequently, these characteristics may serve as cues that are used by respondents to guide their interactions with survey interviewers.
      • But didn't go any further until he had taken some cue from her that it was okay.
      • We were the ones who did not know the protocols - but followed the few cues.
      • The experimenter effect is a term used to describe any of a number of subtle cues or signals from an experimenter that affect the performance or response of subjects in the experiment.
    5. 1.5 A facility for playing through an audio or video recording very rapidly until a desired starting point is reached.
      选听(或选看)键
verbkyo͞okju
[with object]
  • 1Give a cue to or for.

    给…提示(或暗示)

    curious pedestrians are cued by the arrival of stretch limousines
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He won't speak to the press unless an overture of fanned notes cues him.
    • Ok I embellish but that's my interpretation when she cues the violins.
    • When cued by the end of a song or solo, the room would erupt into enthusiastic applause and ‘woos,’ not to mention the standing ovations that brought both concerts to an end.
    • On set, instead of saying ‘Action’, he cued his actors by firing a gun.
    • A slicker actor would have cued revulsion in children, but here the icky inevitability of movie clinches had been thwarted.
    • A tinny soundtrack is used to cue the arrival of dramatic tension - a job that is better left to performers.
    • Unity was the message; cue loud applause from almost the entire room.
    • In the earlier days, I wanted the music to cue you almost like a curtain.
    • Some lines in his movies sound as if they were written to cue his reactions, and they are the more memorable for that.
    • But when he goes down to the valley, it's the same two sentences in Spanish, and then they cue the mariachis.
    • So, not content with reducing my audience to laughter with my first attempt, I cued the musicians to start over.
    • Note the telling musical score, anticipating events, cueing the audience as to when to be scared, assuming we cannot figure that out ourselves.
    • Like laugh tracks, they cue our emotional responses, but they also disguise their coerciveness by making us feel included.
    • Our vast inside sources cued us in about this extraordinary gentleman.
    • So it cues you that something's around and you try and contain that.
    • The cast is great, but everything is so cued, signed, and anticipated that the movie makes me sick at times.
    • It cues our hate to keep us watching, like a bullfighter taunting a bull: waving red to draw our attention and anger.
    • A group of teenagers have taken it upon themselves to cue a new snooker hall for the people of the town.
    • As the game shifts in tone from the humorous to the dark and back again, this production feels compelled to cue the audience with an almost comic earnestness.
    • The musicians sit scattered at both ends of the stage, warming up for an improv exercise in which they cue dancers to stop dancing by quickly interrupting their movement with music.
    1. 1.1 Act as a prompt or reminder.
      提醒
      have a list of needs and questions on paper to cue you

      将需要和问题列在纸上以提醒你。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • This may include cueing or prompting, questioning, modeling, telling, or discussing.
      • For recall to be the measure that most appropriately captures the process of shopping and product choice, shoppers would remember the brand name without being cued or reminded.
      • Make your reminder cues both informative and obvious.
      • I can be cued back through patient prompting, but it takes me a while, and it might not last.
      • If I forget a line, they're not going to cue me, you know?
    2. 1.2 Set a piece of audio or video equipment in readiness to play (a particular part of the recorded material)
      使录音(或录像)设备处于播放(某部分录音或录像资料)的准备状态
      features make it easier to cue up a tape for editing

      特色制件使得播放某部分编辑带的状态设置更为容易。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • To listen to a storm, cue up this DVD and give the volume knob a sharp, clockwise twist.
      • The risers are rolled in; lights are fixed, sound is cued and video monitors are put in place.
      • I think that's a good goal to shoot for, but I don't necessarily agree that everything has to be cued up in one master list to achieve it.
      • Since many of the program's participants had never played a record, let alone cued one up, they began by first explaining how a record makes sound on a turntable and then showing them how to handle and cue it.
      • I suppose we are meant to include the guy who cues her vocal track as part of the band.
      • A manager who has to train distant new hires can directly present the orientation session using the video/audio streaming feed, cueing slides showing detailed information and taking questions from the audience in real time.
      • If you own the tape, its probably cued up to this piece.
      • When I stick it in the drive again an hour or even a year later, it cues it back up to where I left off.
      • Because recorded motion can be cued and played back live, the puppeteer can layer a performance, as one would produce a multitrack audio recording.
      • Instead of having to cue up a tape and set up the mix I could just listen.
      • Actually controlling the quality of the audio and getting it cued up is the responsibility of the studio manager, effectively a sound engineer, who prepares audio clips for broadcast.
      • The director called for the clip, but, oops, it wasn't cued.
      • Streaming-music sites cue up an amazing playlist of songs, a variety of features and plenty of customer stickiness for advertisers.
      • He seemed to have been having difficulty taking out our track and cueing the next set of music and it caused tremendous problems for us because the band was going in fits and starts.
      • Press the same button again to put the camera shot back on, and then you would press a button next to it to cue up the next graphic.
      • See, this is what they try and teach you in school, but kids know it already if they're on their decks, cueing records up and learning to count them in.
      • The snickering stopped when I realized - cue melodramatic organ music - that the creepy kid was me.
      • He fixes my ‘broken’ tape recorder and cues it faster than I can write this sentence.
      • The tape with the self-righteous denunciations has been taken off the reel while the new tape, full of self-righteous media navel-gazing, is cued up.
      • Full screen graphics can be cued in and cued up by using two buttons.

Phrases

  • on cue

    • At the correct moment.

      恰好在这时候

      right on cue the door opened

      门就在此时此刻打开了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • As if on cue, a door on the far side of the room opened, and a voice called.
      • As if right on cue, the door to the parlor opened just then and another servant, a young man, entered.
      • At that very moment as if on cue, somewhere in the distance a wolf let out a menacing howl.
      • Barely had he collapsed when two others rushed to his aid, sweeping him into an ambulance that sped forward on cue from a side street.
      • On cue, the creature began running towards her, sword drawn and red eyes frighteningly wild.
      • TV coaches can teach a candidate how to smile on cue and even how to feign sincerity.
      • On cue, Ashby entered with a cart possessing several trays from which delicious aromas rose.
      • They ate in silence, and they appeared to finish their food together, as if on cue.
      • Right on cue, fish began to show, and the water suddenly came alive.
      • The pages turn right on cue and the pictures are evocative enough that the story tells itself just by listening.
  • take one's cue from

    • Follow the example or advice of.

      学…的样;听…的劝告

      McGee did not move and Julia took her cue from him

      麦吉没有动,朱莉娅学着他的样。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • If I understand it aright, objective calculation and measurement take their cue from - and ultimately serve - circumspective involvement in the world.
      • He takes his cue from what they are doing, and I stand in awe of how often he is correct in forecasting what they will do.
      • Yeah, and most people don't take their cue from that.
      • In the 1960s and 70s we took our cue from what was happening worldwide.
      • Until then try to take your cues from how he behaves both publicly and privately, and don't be afraid to ask questions!
      • The conductor of the symphony orchestra does not control the activity of the players, but they do follow the score and take their cue from the conductor's directions.
      • These influences pale in significance however, when compared to the massive list of performers who took their cues from him.
      • As with the overall design of the house, details take their cues from the barn.
      • Everyone else in the cast takes their cue from and builds off this edge.
      • I took a cue from her and began serving the customers' breakfast.

Origin

Mid 16th century: of unknown origin.

cue2

nounkyo͞okju
  • A long, straight, tapering wooden rod for striking the ball in pool, billiards, snooker, etc.

    (斯诺克、台球等的)球杆

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Prizes for winners and runners-up are new snooker cues.
    • Unlike, say, a tennis racket or cricket bat, a snooker cue is thought irreplaceable by its owner.
    • Following centuries of Billiards dominated by England and France, during the 19th century a third country became obsessed with the sport of cues and balls.
    • When the cue hits the object ball it will bend the tangent line back away from the corner.
    • It got worse when, attempting to summon a waiter for more wine, I mistakenly outbid everyone in the raffle for a snooker cue signed by innumerable world champions.
    • Pool is supposed to be an easy starting point for cue sports.
    • Bend forward into a shooting position and see if you feel you can sight straight down your cue.
    • Other items include a snooker cue signed by top stars, an England under 21s signed match ball and Bath rugby shirts and balls signed by players.
    • England was resistant to this change for some reason - the cue was available in billiard rooms by 1734, but did not gain real popularity until around 1800.
    • A quick nudge of the cue and the 4 ball was in, center pocket.
    • This game is more than just a game of balls and pockets and cues.
    • The usual effects can be heard such as the cue hitting the ball and such.
    • If I strike a billiard ball with a cue stick, I effect a transfer of [physical] energy.
    • He just grabbed his cue and began lining up his shot, looking incredibly sullen.
    • Perhaps his vanity had caused him to only use a snooker cue chalk once and then throw it away.
    • Every time I screw my cue together, my goal is to be a better player when I unscrew it.
    • One man suffered penknife stab wounds to his back and another was hit around the head with a snooker cue.
    • Shoot straight at the object ball, striking the cue ball one cue tip below center.
    • At one stage he went out armed with a snooker cue, but went back inside.
    • Also banned from cabins is sporting equipment such as cricket bats, tennis racquets, golf clubs and snooker cues.
verbkyo͞okju
[no object]
  • Use a cue to strike a ball in pool, billiards, snooker, etc.

    Mark cued well early on
    Example sentencesExamples
    • But I started cueing well and Alan couldn't put me away,’ he said.
    • It gives me time get back to the way I was cueing before Sheffield.
    • And the three times Regal Masters champion was soon cueing superbly.
    • The Welshman just about deserved to edge ahead after cueing so well in the early stages of the match, although his game dipped after the interval.
    • ‘Stephen deserved to win it - he was cueing beautifully and produced his best form when it mattered,’ said the six-times champion.
    • ‘I missed a few easy balls today but I am cueing brilliantly,’ he said.
    • I am cueing well, but every now and then I make an unbelievable howler.

Origin

Mid 18th century (denoting a long plait or pigtail): variant of queue.

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