The introductory section of a story.
Sinónimos
Examples for "lead"
Examples for "lead"
1The reality is that young people must lead the revolution, he said.
2They lead to new ideas, new processes, new products and more efficiency.
3However, it wants concessions which might lead to a longer school year.
4Directly granting privileges to accounts, however, can lead to significant security problems.
5The result has seen Dr Kerryn Phelps' lead slightly reduced to 1626.
1An Unlikely Silicon Union Alright, I'm aware I buried the lede here.
2EditorsNote: fixes spelling of Pavilion in lede Houston pulls off upset of No.
3Which is burying the lede.
4EditorsNote: Makes some cosmetic tweaks to lede; corrects and adds details in seventh graf Jordan Lyons scored 20 points and No.
5The lede deals with rumours that Craig is training heavily to get back into shape for the film they're calling Bond 25.
1Not good, but it was the best lead-in he could think of.
2That is the lead-in time needed to launch a world art tour.
3His answer was as perfect a lead-in as I could have scripted.
4With virtually no distractions and no lead-in, they just laid it down.
5The lead-in time to final is very short, particularly for Galway.
6But George's lead-in question certainly didn't sound like a prelude to a rejection.
7During the 4-week lead-in period all patients received peginterferon plus ribavirin.
8It would, though, give NBC News a strong lead-in to its convention coverage.