lede

NOUN
  1. the introductory section of a story
    it was an amusing lead-in to a very serious matter
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How To Use lede In A Sentence

  • She visited her relatives in Castledermot on a yearly basis when her brother and sister were alive.
  • Some further elucidation should follow that lede but, basically, the lede communicates the essential nugget of information, true or not. Elizabeth Boleman-Herring: Still Seeking 'The Ineffable' in 2012
  • Knee-length lederhosen with no stitching cost $500, machine-stitched $785 and hand-stitched $1,320.
  • One could make the argument that it is to replace tweedledum with tweedledee. Tracy Rosenberg: Towards A Just Communications System: Pacifica Radio and the Never-Ending Battle
  • In January 2009, Gordon Brown submitted a recipe for rumbledethumps to a cookbook for Donaldson's School for the Deaf, describing it as his favourite food Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Donald R. Morris The Houston Post In "The Joys and Oys of Yiddish" [XV,3], Messrs. Lederer and Schenkerman put the word cockamamy VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XI No 4
  • If the policies of these two disparate figures often have a tweedledum-and-tweedledee-ish look to them, then what we face is not specific party politics or individual style, but a system with its own steamroller force, and its own set of narrow, repetitive “solutions” to our problems. Tom Engelhardt: Living in the 51st State (of Denial)
  • He admitted it was deliberately written in gobbledegook. The Sun
  • Judging by the alpaca ponchos and lederhosen on display, I'd have to say Peru and Germany.
  • We both dressed up in lederhosen and yodelled, it was a lot of fun. Times, Sunday Times
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