Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(5)
"leading the dance" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to refer to someone taking charge and guiding a process. For example, "The CEO took the lead in developing the new marketing strategy, leading the dance all the way to successful implementation."
Exact(7)
The Adversary appears in the biblical frame, leading the dance around the golden calf.
Mr. Kremer was involved all through, twirling around or questioning the singer and leading the dance in the instrumental numbers.
Ms. Cole, like Miss Bartlett, the teacher in the movie (played by Susan Egan), had an interest in dance before leading the dance team.
While the interviewer is leading the dance, this is your chance to find out more about the programme, with questions that are pertinent to your plans, such as details about particular clubs, study trips or centres of research.
In exasperation, the EU's French trade commissioner, Pascal Lamy, observed that as a result "the British are leading the dance".For the moment, the question of Britain's euro entry is parked Mr Blair's intentions are not doubted and the timing is seen as a matter for him.
When he delivers a stylistic flourish, it's worth the wait: a father-daughter dance after Estrella's first communion is a track out from the main table to the dance itself (to a tune ironically called In The World), followed by a track back to Estrella's empty chair, a sublime camera move that mimics the bellows-like movement of the accordion leading the dance.
Similar(48)
The sweetened-up, danced-down meagerness — with Darci Kistler as the heroine and Yvonne Borree leading the Russian Dance — ran through some of the company's other Balanchine repertory as well.
Mr. Carbone is thoroughly believable leading the zesty male dance, and its solo, danced originally by the gutsy Edward Villella and as glinting as mica in the pavement.
The King Bar, a new night spot in Vedado, has set up a charcoal grill on the terrace leading to the dance floor.
Yet last week, Britain's leading dance festival, Dance Umbrella, joined forces with the pressure group Dance UK to host a sell-out debate that was titled, starkly, Where Are All the Women?
Like the Sphinx, she keeps her mysteries, leading the media a merry dance by speaking only in intriguing riddles, cloaked with the kind of rich symbolism and allegory that requires a keen academic mind to unpick.
More suggestions(15)
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com