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lead-in

NOUN
  1. wire connecting an antenna to a receiver or a transmitter to a transmission line
  2. the introductory section of a story
    it was an amusing lead-in to a very serious matter

How To Use lead-in In A Sentence

  • After the lead-in music played and the taping actually began, some of these barbs turned sharp.
  • After a lead-in period from last year, this means that from this year onwards, a grower who plants any seed potatoes, other than certified basic seed, is breaking the law.
  • The objective of the Genesis project is to reduce the lead-in time of setting up a business from three years to one year.
  • A brief rundown of the band and their history is provided as a lead-in to discuss one or two of their landmark albums, including fresh interviews with band members, a rock critic or two, record label execs, producers and engineers and so on. Michael Giltz: DVDs: Ellery Queen, Rush, Casey Affleck and More
  • The following sentences are the lead-ins for the multiple choice questions.
  • Good news for the fans I guess, but I'm not bothering with this. toho brilliant lead-in David John Malkovich, Frances McDormand, Ken Jeong Cast in Transformers 3 | /Film
  • The lead-in to the climactic scene is nothing compared to the original.
  • The "Parker Spitzer" lead-in averaged 471,000 total viewers, meaning that "Parker Spitzer" lost 17,000 total viewers from the already dismally-rated 7PM hour. 'Parker Spitzer' Ratings: CNN Show Debuts In LAST
  • A run phase in which prices break support from the lead-in trend line and plunge lower in a downhill run.
  • But part of that will be how comptable the series is with it's new lead-in show, "Prison Break. Slice of SciFi
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