Meaning cite
What does cite mean? Here you find 26 meanings of the word cite. You can also add a definition of cite yourself

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cite


v. 1) to make reference to a decision in another case to make a l...
Source: dictionary.law.com

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make reference to The Federal Reserve has pledged low interest rates until late 2014, citing in part the weakness of the job market. — BusinessWeek (Feb 21, 2012)
Source: vocabulary.com

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1cite something (as something) to mention something as a reason or an example, or in order to support what you are saying She cited her heavy workload as the reason for her breakdown. Thesaurusmention [..]
Source: oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com

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mid-15c., "to summon," from Old French citer "to summon" (14c.), from Latin citare "to summon, urge, call; put in sudden motion, call forward; rouse, excite," frequentati [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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to give as an example.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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(1) To make reference to a legal authority, such as a statute or the decision in another case, to make a legal point in argument. (2) To give notice of being charged with a minor crime and a date for [..]
Source: nolo.com

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cite


(revision in progress) Citation:
Source: quotegarden.com (offline)

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citation: a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage; "the student's essay failed to list several important citations"; &quot [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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v. To refer to specifically.
Source: easypacelearning.com

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To give credit to a source used in research.
Source: usg.edu

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In science publishing, to give credit to the previous work of other scientists — usually through a list of references, or citations, at the end of a scientific article. Through citations, the [..]
Source: undsci.berkeley.edu

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cite


 to call or arouse.
Source: shakespeare-online.com

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To quote or refer to an authority outside oneself, usually in support of a point or conclusion or by way of explanation or example. In scholarly publication, the source of such a reference is indicate [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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cit·ed cit·ing [Latin citare to rouse, call on, summon] 1 : to demand the appearance of in court : serve with a citation [had been cited for contempt] [you are hereby cited to show cause ...
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

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cite


Certified Incentive Travel Executive (certification sponsored by SITE). See SITE.
Source: eventplannerspain.com

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A citation is a reference to a source (not always the original source), published or unpublished.
Source: gjesm.net

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(n) a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage(v) make reference to(v) commend(v) refer to(v) repeat a passage from(v) refer to for illustration or proof(v) advance eviden [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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cite


The OGC Conformance & Interoperability Testing & Evaluation Initiative (CITE) is an OGC Interoperability Initiative designed to test and evaluate OGC Interfaces and products that implement the [..]
Source: opengeospatial.org

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cite


  Giving credit to the original author when using (quoting and/or paraphrasing) their thoughts and/or ideas in your own writing
Source: nau.edu (offline)

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cite


to incite
Source: shakespearehigh.com

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To command the presence of a person; to notify a person of legal proceedings against him or her, and to require his appearance in the court, especially to face contempt proceedings. Also, to read or r [..]
Source: 1888drugcrimes.com

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The name of a case – the way it is written. For example, R v Smith or Smith v Brown.
Source: letasa.asn.au

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cite


n. "city," s.v. city OED. KEY: cite@n
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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n 87 cite 28 citee 47 citees 8 cites 1 cyte 2 cytes 1
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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To quote; to repeat, as a passage from a book, or the words of another. *fro|cité, fromla|civitas
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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cite


redirect
Source: en.wiktionary.org





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