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Discover LudwigThe phrase "leading through" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe a situation where someone is guiding or directing someone or something through a particular path or process. Example: The experienced hiker led the group through the treacherous mountain trail, carefully pointing out potential hazards along the way.
Exact(57)
Stone passageways splinter off in all directions, leading through low tunnels into secret plazas hung with flaming purple bougainvilleas.
(See my previous post about the risks of leading through culture).
I have found that when I choose to respond with trust in God, I am partnering with the one who is in control and leading through learning rather than obtaining anything material.
The poplars lining the track leading through the valley give it a French look.
Residents are divided over whether the road leading through town should be paved.
The ability to listen, nurture the ideas of others and leading through collaboration are all 21st century leadership traits.
It had Mitt Romney leading through most of October and in its final poll by a point – a 5pt error.
She wants to live and rule by her principles — freeing the powerless, leading through strength and fairness — but it's tricky.
She is candidly nervous around cows, in the mazy isolation of woods, on a road leading through peeling terraced housing.
Eschewing the sunshine, two boys sat on a stairwell leading through the estate to Agnes's family home.
A few miles down a two-lane blacktop, he turned east onto a gravel road leading through sagebrush and grasslands rising toward the Laramie Mountains.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com