lead-up
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
Deverbal from lead up to.
Noun
    
- An event, or sequence of events, that leads up to something; the period during which these events occur.
- Retailers get a lot more business in the lead-up to Christmas.
 - 2000, Anne Marie Gulde, Juha Kähkönen, Peter Keller, Pros and Cons of Currency Board Arrangements in the Lead-Up to EU Accession and Participation in the Euro Zone, →ISBN:- While testing the stability of the exchange rate regime in the market is clearly important in the lead-up to adopting the euro, such a test is certainly possible in the context of a CBA: the current account position, the level of reserves, monetary aggregates, growth performance, and interest rates provide clear indications of whether exchange rates are at appropriate levels.
 
- 2002, Peter Mora, David Place, “Stress Correlation Function Evolution in Lattice Solid Elasto-dynamic Models of Shear and Fracture Zones and Earthquake Prediction”, in Earthquake Processes, →ISBN:- If the crust does behave as a CP system, stress correlation lengths should grow in the lead-up to large events through the action of small to moderate ruptures and drop sharply once a large event occurs.
 
- 2013, Steve Webb, Corridors to Extinction and the Australian Megafauna, →ISBN, page 41:- The Tertiary is the lead-up to the extinction event that will take centre stage in later chapters: the megafauna extinctions.
 
 
See also
    
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