Another small and sometimes confusing word.
The first meaning that comes to mind is a cue is a prompt, often from someone standing behind the camera in a television studio.
That is to say that a cue is some form of signal, a wave, a nod, or verbal.
A cue can also be where a tape or recording is set to a certain place, ready to play. One could assume, if playing tracks off an album of songs, and you wanted to play the fourth track, then you would cue it up, ready to go on, of course, the moment you got a, yes, cue to play it.
Then there is a cue used in a game of pool or snooker, that is a long thin tapered piece of wood with a felt tip.
Not exactly my favourite game, but it’s always the cues fault, not mine.
This is not to be considered with Que which is a shortened form for Quebec, in Canada.
Or que, which for some reason, only in California, is short for barbecue.
Or Queue, as in a long line, or a short one, of people waiting to get on a bus, or waiting to get tickets
In my experience every queue I get in is always a long one, and then suffer the frustration of waiting hours only to be told the tickets have all been sold.
Almost as bad as being stuck in a traffic jam, which is technically a queue of cars, never to get through the first set of lights, and sometimes not the second.
And don’t get me started on phone queues.
Queues are for people who have a lot of time on the hands.