queue

To put oneself or itself at the end of a waiting line.

Noun

  1. A line of people, vehicles or other objects, usually one to be dealt with in sequence (i.e., the one at the front end is dealt with first, the one behind is dealt with next, and so on), and which newcomers join at the opposite end (the back).
    • I was absent-minded at the moment and was last in the queue. - 1916, John Buchan, “Chapter 5”, in Greenmantle:
    • In a report published on October 31, Transport Focus said that a number of train companies were unable to convince it about their ability to sell a full range of tickets, handle cash payments, and avoid excessive queues...
  2. A waiting list or other means of organizing people or objects into a first-come-first-served order.
  3. A data structure in which objects are added to one end, called the tail, and removed from the other, called the head (in the case of a FIFO queue). The term can also refer to a LIFO queue or stack where these ends coincide.
    • 2005, David Flanagan, Java in a Nutshell, p. 234, Queue implementations are commonly based on insertion order as in first-in, first-out (FIFO) queues or last-in, first-out queues (LIFO queues are also known as stacks).
  4. An animal's tail.
    • HESSE: Az., a lion, queue fourchée, rampt., barry of ten, arg. and gu., crowned, or, and holding in his dexter paw a sword, ppr., hilt and pommel, gold. - 1863, Charles Boutell, A Manual of Heraldry, page 369:
  5. A men's hairstyle with a braid or ponytail at the back of the head, such as that worn by men in Imperial China.
    • In the morning and evening, spruce Chinamen stroll about or chat at each other's doors, in blue trousers, white jacket, and a queue into which red silk is plaited till it reaches almost to their heels. - 1869, Alfred...
    • […], there were seated astraddle the whole hundred of the baronet's musqueteers, each engaged in plaiting into a queue the hair of the man who sat in front of him. - 1889, A[rthur] Conan Doyle, chapter XIX, in Micah...
    • A large number of loyal officials, rather than shave the front part of the head and wear the Manchu queue, voluntarily shaved the whole head, […] - 1912, Herbert Allen Giles, China and the Manchus, Chapter III — Shun...

Origin

From Middle English queue, quew, qwew, couwe, from Anglo-Norman queue, keu and Old French cöe, cue, coe (“tail”), from Vulgar Latin cōda, from Latin cauda. See also Middle French queu, cueue. Doublet of coda and cola.

Forms

queues

Synonyms

line lineup queue

Hyponyms

batch queue circular queue dole queue double-ended queue job queue jump queue message queue poison queue prio queue priority queue ready queue reference queue breadline stack traffic jam

Related

caudal cue jump the queue queueing theory queue-jump queue-jumper queueless quevée

Verb

  1. To put oneself or itself at the end of a waiting line.
    • Although there is a spacious circulating area beyond the platforms at Clacton, there is severe overcrowding on peak Saturdays; at times of pressure passengers have to queue out into the street [...] - 1959 April, B....
  2. To arrange themselves into a physical waiting queue.
  3. To add to a queue data structure.
  4. To fasten the hair into a queue.
    • The sons, in short square skirted coats with rows of stupendous brass buttons, and their hair generally queued in the fashion of the times, especially if they could procure an eel skin for the purpose, it being esteemed...
    • Though Monroe the man has become a vague anachronistic figure in knee breeches and with queued, powdered hair, his name is perpetuated in the Monroe Doctrine, evoked by him as a temporary response to an immediate...
  5. To matchmake.
    • I'm queueing into a game.

Forms

queues queueing queuing queued

Synonyms

join a queue join the queue line up

Related

FIFO LIFO cue

Derived

dequeue enqueue nonqueued nonqueueing queueable queueless queuer queue up requeue solo queue unqueued