lead someone a dance Definition
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lead1
verb led, leading
- tr & intr
1. To guide by going in front.
- Thesaurus: guide, conduct, escort, usher, pilot, steer.
3. To guide or make someone or something go in a certain direction by holding or pulling with the hand, etc.
4. To guide.
5. To conduct.
6. To induce.
- Thesaurus: influence, induce, prompt, sway, incline, cause.
tr & intr
8. To direct or be in control (of something).
- Thesaurus: direct, govern, command, preside over, supervise, manage, chair, run.
10. To live, pass or experience.
- Example: lead a miserable existence
11. To go or take someone in a certain direction.
- Example: The road leads to the village
12. To be foremost or first; to be the most important or influential in (a group) in a particular field.
- Example: They lead the world in engineering
- Thesaurus: exceed, excel, surpass, outperform; Antonym: lag.
14. Said of a newspaper: to have (a particular story) as its most important article.
- Example: The tabloids all lead with the latest atrocity
- Form: lead with (usually)
- Form: lead on
15. To be the leader of (an orchestra).
16. To conduct liquid along a channel or course.
tr & intr
17. cards.
- To begin a round of cards by playing (the first card, especially of a particular suit).
- To adduce.
- Form: lead in (often)
- 1. An instance of guidance given by leading.
2. The first, leading, or most prominent place; leadership.
3. The amount by which someone or something, etc is in front of others in a race, contest, etc.
- Example: had a lead of about a metre
5. An initial clue or piece of information which might help solve a problem, mystery, etc.
- Thesaurus: clue, hint.
7. The most important story in a newspaper.
8. A precedent or example.
9. Precedence.
10. An indication.
11. Direction.
12. Initiative.
13. A wire or conductor taking electricity from a source to an appliance.
14. cards.
- The act or right of playing first, the first card played or the play of someone who plays first.
16. A watercourse leading to a mill.
17. A channel through ice.
18. A main conductor in electrical distribution.
- To entice them into a wrong or misguided course.
- To force them to follow.
- See under dance.
- See under garden.
- To have an easy life.
- To go first, especially to guide others.
Phrasal Verb: lead off
- To begin.
- To persuade them to go further than intended.To deceive or mislead them.
- To bring them or it out by preceding.
- Example: led the team out to tremendous applause
- To result in it.
- To approach (a topic of conversation) reluctantly or by gradual steps or stages.
- Example: leading up to the question of money
- Example: Persistent lateness lead up to his dismissal
