Having knowledge or understanding of something; well informed.
clueful helpline operators
Example sentencesExamples
The thing that made me feel lame was that I had been insufficiently clueful or sophisticated to catch on.
But acknowledging that he was speaking in front of a fairly clueful group of international press analysts, he concluded: ‘Yeah, you're right.’
Not all networks seem so clueful, however, and are still touting warmed over content as the money spinner.
For such a clueful person, he has an interesting blind spot.
He comes across as distinctly more clueful than his colleague, though that may be because he's a better debater.
Even clueful system integrators can't afford to do this because they're under constant competitive pressure to cut costs by using generic components.
In fact, clueful corporate entities can get together with free-range hackers to improve everybody's environment.
Something similar started to happen in the summer, when the company did an unusually clueful thing: they created unmoderated newsgroups for every one of their major products.
When all that fails, the clueful turn to their search engines, looking for other lost souls with similar complaints.
In the end, the weblog gives the candidate, his staff and all the people in the field a chance to conduct something like a clueful conversation.
Definition of clueful in US English:
clueful
adjectiveˈklo͞ofəl
informal
Well-informed; competently intelligent.
clueful implementers are aware of the issues and are looking out for you
Example sentencesExamples
For such a clueful person, he has an interesting blind spot.
When all that fails, the clueful turn to their search engines, looking for other lost souls with similar complaints.
Something similar started to happen in the summer, when the company did an unusually clueful thing: they created unmoderated newsgroups for every one of their major products.
Not all networks seem so clueful, however, and are still touting warmed over content as the money spinner.
Even clueful system integrators can't afford to do this because they're under constant competitive pressure to cut costs by using generic components.
But acknowledging that he was speaking in front of a fairly clueful group of international press analysts, he concluded: ‘Yeah, you're right.’
In the end, the weblog gives the candidate, his staff and all the people in the field a chance to conduct something like a clueful conversation.
The thing that made me feel lame was that I had been insufficiently clueful or sophisticated to catch on.
He comes across as distinctly more clueful than his colleague, though that may be because he's a better debater.
In fact, clueful corporate entities can get together with free-range hackers to improve everybody's environment.