A lead paragraph (sometimes shortened to lead; also spelled lede) is the opening paragraph of an article, essay, book chapter, or other written work that summarizes its main ideas.
Video Lead paragraph
Spelling
The term is sometimes spelled "lede", with a claim that it was a historical spelling intended to distinguish it from the homograph lead, which was commonly used in editing and print setting to indicate the addition or subtraction of "leading" (i.e. blank lead ingots used to create "white space" between items, such as a headline and the text which followed).
However, the spelling 'lede' does not appear in any journalism style books or textbooks before 1959.
Maps Lead paragraph
Other introductions
In journalism, the lead paragraph should not be confused with the standfirst (UK), rider, kicker (US), bank head(line), deck, dek, or subhead (US). These terms refer to an introductory or summary line or brief paragraph, located immediately above or below the headline, and typographically distinct from the body of the article.
Types of leads
Journalistic leads emphasize grabbing the attention of the reader. In journalism, the failure to mention the most important, interesting or attention-grabbing elements of a story in the first paragraph is sometimes called "burying the lead", as in the phrase, "Don't bury the lead!" Most standard news leads include brief answers to the questions of who, what, why, when, where, and how the key event in the story took place.
Leads in essays summarize the outline of the argument and conclusion that follows in the main body of the essay. Encyclopedia leads tend to define the subject matter as well as emphasize the interesting points of the article. Features and general articles in magazines tend to be somewhere between journalistic and encyclopedian in style and often lack a distinct lead paragraph entirely. Leads and book forewords vary enormously in length, intent and content.
See also
- Introduction (writing)
- Abstract (summary)
- Opening sentence
- Inverted pyramid (journalism)
- Editorial (also known as a "leader" in British English)
- Nut graph
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia