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noun

lead

LEHD
noun
1
A soft, heavy, bluish-grey metal, chemical symbol Pb.
"Old paint often contained lead, which is now known to be toxic."
2
The state of being ahead in a race, contest, or competition.
"The runner built a comfortable lead in the final lap."
3
The main role in a film, play, or performance, or the person who plays it.
"She landed the lead in the school production."
4
A piece of information that may help solve a case or investigation.
"The detective followed up on a promising new lead."
verb
1
To guide or direct a person, group, or activity.
"She was chosen to lead the new marketing team."
"The trail leads down to a hidden waterfall."

How to Use Lead

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishEither the heavy metal, or the act of guiding/being ahead of others.

Common mistake

The metal "lead" rhymes with "bed," while the verb "lead" (to guide) rhymes with "seed" — easy to mix up in writing since they're spelled the same.

Common pairings
lead a team take the lead lead pipe lead role

Word Forms

leaded past tense, leads plural, leads plural, leads singular

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Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

Old paint often contained _____, which is now known to be toxic.

Etymology

The metal sense comes from Old English lēad. The verb "to lead" (guide) is a separate, unrelated word from the same Old English root as "load."

Rhymes for lead

See all rhymes for lead →
Definitions: FreeDict original editorial