0 past simple and past participle of cite
1 to mention something as proof for a theory or as a reason why something has happened:
2 to officially name or mention someone or something in a law court, or to officially request someone to appear in a court of law:
3 to praise someone in the armed forces publicly because of their brave actions:
He was cited for bravery.
The process was reiterated until we felt confident that we had recovered key articles and those most frequently cited by the profession.
He also most generously assisted the author in securing copies of a number of the sources cited in this paper.
And excluding simple foreknowledge from the playing field is logically premature, since the cited grounds for this exclusion are far from conclusive.
And, as we have seen, there is some empirical evidence (from studies cited above) that such constraints hold in the grammars of adult bilinguals.
The extension service was cited as the main source of fresh seeds particularly in villages without seed banks.
The reasons cited by contemporaries ranged from general monetary crises and the rise of overseas missions, perceived as more glamorous, to increasing consumerism.
Additionally, some of the inconsistencies relate to dates and titles of cited works.
However, fewer children cited context when interpreting pseudohomonyms, relative to children interpreting nonsense words (65 and 77 %, respectively).