I've noticed a new fingernails-screeching-on-chalkboard trend in the written word, both on paper and in electronic media.
It doesn't happen with the spoken word, because all three of the words involved are pronounced the same.
Here's the situation.
Consider someone telling a story, and then writing a sentence like this:
"Queue the angry customer."
Here's the issue.
Cue is the word you're looking for. It's a stage direction. It's used in plays, movies, and newscasts. It's a signal for someone to take their place onstage or to speak their line, for example. It's also used to call for a sound effect, a spotlight, a brass band, and so on.
Queue means to stand in line, or to form a line -- a queue of people, waiting for something, like boarding passes at an airport.
Que is an alternative spelling of queue, useful in Scrabble.
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