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lede

American  
[leed] / lid /
Or lead

noun

  1. Journalism.

    1. a short summary serving as an introduction to a news story, article, or other copy.

    2. the main and often most important news story.


Etymology

Origin of lede

First recorded in 1950–55; altered spelling of lead 1 ( def. ) (in the journalism sense “short introductory summary”), used in the printing trades to distinguish it from the homograph lead 2 ( def. ) (in the sense “thin strip of type metal for increasing the space between lines of type”)

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The headlines from the Federal Open Market Committee’s policy-decision meeting this coming week will, to use journalists’ jargon, likely bury the lede.

From Barron's • Oct. 24, 2025

You can’t accuse those who title “NOVA” episodes of burying the lede with “Ancient Desert Death Trap.”

From The Wall Street Journal • Oct. 21, 2025

Five years ago, that was the tortured lede of the column that was published in the immediate wake of Bryant’s death.

From Los Angeles Times • Jan. 26, 2025

The lede was ‘To Russia without love,’ and then I wrote a sidebar, ‘My One-Round Fight With Mike Tyson.’

From Seattle Times • Jun. 3, 2024

The makyng of the rof wt tymber and cariage and workmanship ixclxv li. xviij s. iij d. qa, lede castyng, jynyng, leyyng sawdir with diuers cariage vcxxxv li. x s. x d.

From Medieval English Nunneries c. 1275 to 1535 by Power, Eileen