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this post was submitted on 06 Feb 2024
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Asklemmy
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I just found out that you can't take someone's lead in order to behave like they are behaving, you can only follow their lead.
I thought that taking someone's lead, "I'm taking their lead", is an actual expression, while apparently it is not.
Taking someone's lead sounds like a British saying indicating the opposite of following someone's lead. It sounds like you're taking someone's leash in your hands and directing them where to go.
I'm not sure, but that makes sense.
I'll have to take your lead on that.
"Take the lead" is certainly an expression used in the UK to denote guiding people, as in "I'll take the lead". I assume both come from ballroom dancing.
I'm sure it's used elsewhere but it may also simply be a conflation of the two.
Yeah, taking the lead I think is a pretty common expression, meaning that you'll take the initiative, but I've used " taking their lead" to mean that another person has taken the lead and someone else is following them.
Which is apparently not real at all, but I only became aware of this because another Lemmy put up a TIL post that explained how they thought that was an expression and discovered after using it their entire life that it was not in any dictionary.
Just like me