I think I know the distinction but I favor "queuing" uber alles 'cause when else do you get to smush that many vowels together?
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Apparently people use the spelling 'queueing' specifically to get more vowels.
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Let's add a 'y.'
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I used to spell 'magick' as 'mhaeghwychke' because more letters makes it more mhaeghwychkeal.
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I hadn't even seen "cuing" in the sense of people getting in line & would consider it a blunder, but what do I know?
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people getting in line are queueing, a DJ preparing to play a track is cuing.
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I'd say queuing up, cuing up feels like it means "putting on right now" as opposed to queuing up's "put in line to play after this".
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I think American English is mostly cueing up, while queueing up is the British English. I like queueing better.
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. Banned in Sweden. SubGenius, Zhuangist, white-hat troll. Defrocked mathematician. Brain problems.