lead into

lead into (something)

1. To guide or direct someone or something into something or some place. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is usually used between "lead" and "into." I dug a path that would lead excess rain water into the drainage ditch by the side of our house. The officer led us into the courtroom to await our sentence.
2. To transition or segue into something else. The extended monologue leads into a beautiful description of the Appalachian mountains. Her guitar solo leads into an orchestral arrangement of the band's most popular single.
See also: lead
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

lead someone into something

 and lead someone in
to guide someone into something or some place. The usher led us into the darkened theater and showed us our seats. She led in the children. We led them in.
See also: lead
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

lead into

v.
1. To guide someone into something or some place: The guide led the tourists into the cave.
2. To make a transition into something; segue into something: The ballad leads into a dance number.
See also: lead
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • add in
  • (you) wanna make something of it?
  • all for the best
  • (someone or something) promises well
  • all right
  • a/the feel of (something)
  • (I) wouldn't (do something) if I were you
  • (have) got something going (with someone)
  • a straw will show which way the wind blows
  • accompanied by (someone or something)
References in periodicals archive
Alchemists found a successful formula to turn lead into gold.
A new study demonstrates that this waste stream could be shedding lead into the environment.
Smoking any type of tobacco products on the range should be prohibited to prevent acceleration of inhaled lead into the blood stream and ingestion of lead transferred from hands to the cigarette, cigar, etc.
The city also added calcium orthophosphate to the water supply to control corrosion in pipes which leaches lead into drinking water and recommended running taps for one minute before using.
Dietary iron deficiency can cause increased absorption of lead into the blood from lead stored in the bones.
* treatment of lead-bearing waste material...a) remove contaminants via mechanical or aqueous scrubbing, concentrating the lead bearing components for recycling or further toxicity treatment; b) thermal/mechanical treatment...transform lead into a more stable compound, i.e., lead-silicate glass, to minimize leaching; c) metallic iron additions...in theory, iron added to waste sands diminishes the leaching process, the more chemically active metallic iron actually displacing the lead, rendering the sand nonhazardous.
Other studies have shown that the intrusion of lead into the lens of the eye may cause protein conformational changes that decrease lens transparency.
"Adults today grew up at a time when we were still putting several hundred thousand tons of lead into gasoline each year."
Results from this limited number of cases support the hypothesis that the release of bone lead into blood may substantially buffer the decrease in blood lead levels expected from the reduction in lead intake.
However, individuals with the variant gene shunted proportionately more of their stored lead into the spongier trabecular bone (of kneecaps and vertebrae, for instance) than did those with the normal gene.
Lead solder, flux and piping have also been banned by EPA because these plumbing materials can release traces of lead into the water.
It follows, therefore, that the most effective means of reducing lead levels in well-perfused tissues exhibiting slow lead toxicokinetics (brain), as well as poorly perfused tissues (e.g., the skeleton), is to maximize the lead concentration gradient between these tissues and blood for prolonged periods of time, thereby favoring continued efflux of lead into the circulation and elimination via urinary of fecal routes.
They found that women who never had children -- and therefore never shed significant bone and bone-bound lead to developing offspring -- carry far more lead into old age than those who had been pregnant.
Times of physiologic stress such as menopause can result in the release of stored lead into the blood through demineralization, the same process that causes calcium to be released from bone.
(16) suggested that disintegration caused by mechanical joint action leads to an increased release of lead into synovial fluid.