Definitions
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
- n. A program, as on television, scheduled to follow another: "[Viewers] also stay around for the 11:30 movie lead-out” ( Edwin Diamond).
Wiktionary
- n. broadcasting A program, scheduled to follow another.
Etymologies
- From lead + out. (Wiktionary)
Examples
“After losing contact with the peloton on an earlier climb, Mark Cavendish HTC-Highroad finished a distant 19th, while his lead-out man Mark Renshaw followed Haedo into fourth.”
“Farrar came off his rainbow-striped lead-out and shot up the right side of the road in the final 300 meters.”
““This is the first time Thor and I have raced together and I would say it was a pretty amazing lead-out, so I have to say a big thank you to him tonight,” said Farrar.”
“INDICATORE, Italy (VN) — American Tyler Farrar (Garmin-Cervélo) took full advantage of a stellar lead-out to win a contentious field sprint at the end of the second stage of Tirreno-Adriatico on Thursday.”
““This is the first time Thor and I have raced together and I would say it was a pretty amazing lead-out, so I have to say a big thank you to him tonight.””
““With the lead-out Thor gave me, it was almost easy,” said Farrar.”
“Mark Cavendish's third stage win was tarnished after his main lead-out man was disqualified for headbutting a rival”
The Guardian: Cavendish ready to take on Greipel and put 2010 behind him
“He made it look easy, winning by several bike lengths in the last mad dash, trailed in second by his own lead-out man on the Columbia team, Mark Renshaw.”
“At 9/8c, yet another rehab-induced rerun of Two and a Half Men had the most viewers in prime time — 11.5 million — though it was down significantly from the numbers it usually posts for new episodes, and dragged down its CBS lead-out.”
“At the sprint, Goss received a perfect lead-out but it was Matthews who used the HTC-High Road Express to his advantage and took the maximum three-second bonus, with Goss and Greipel in second and third.”
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