The term "cited as pertinent" could mean that a certain object is considered important. This could mean that something is relevant or suitable to an object.
The prefix of "pertinent" is "per-".
"Pertinent" means relevant or applicable to a particular topic or situation. It refers to information, details, or facts that are directly related and contribute to the understanding or resolution of the matter at hand.
Cuted is not a grammatical word. Did you mean cited? Cited is already the simple past and past participle of 'cite'.
The past tense of cite is cited.
The correct term is "works cited." It is a list of sources (books, articles, websites, etc.) that you directly referenced in your work or research.
Do you mean "pertinent"?
You didn't say which meaning you wanted to use. If you mean cited as in quoted a source for a report, you could say "I cited the magazine article." If you mean cited as in to summon before a court, you might say "He was cited for drunk driving. If you mean cited as in recognized for superior military service, you could say "The soldier was cited for bravery."
pertinent to.
Quotation
The prefix of "pertinent" is "per-".
"Pertinent" means relevant or applicable to a particular topic or situation. It refers to information, details, or facts that are directly related and contribute to the understanding or resolution of the matter at hand.
citation is a noun, cite is the verb. Cite means:to make reference to - She cited Wikipedia as her source of information. His name was cited in connection with the experiment.to repeat from memory - He cited a passage from the Bible.
The details included had to be pertinent to our topic.
I have no idea, but what is ''pertinent history''?
She had asked some pertinent questions. Pertinent information will be forwarded to the appropriate party.
"très à propos"means "spot on, very pertinent" in French.
Pertinent is an adjective which means relevant to a particular issue at hand. A sample sentence is: "It would be pertinent to follow the plan rather than do it haphazardly."