On Oct 2, 2007, at 7:02 AM, Devi Web Development wrote:
...
Usage Case:

<h1>Burmese monks 'to be sent away'</h1>
<p><lede>Thousands of monks detained in Burma's main city of Rangoon will be sent to prisons in the far north of the country, sources have told the BBC.</lede> About 4,000 monks have been rounded up in the past week as the military government has tried to stamp out pro-democracy protests. They are being held at a disused race course and a technical college. Sources from a government-sponsored militia said they would soon be moved away from Rangoon...

In that example from BBC News, the paragraph is actually four paragraphs. <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7022437.stm> BBC News always puts a <B> element around the first paragraph of a story. But they also bolden the second paragraph, if it's explaining the source of the story: <B>...<P>...</B>. <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7018411.stm>

So to satisfy the use case of the BBC, <lede> would need to be a block element. I haven't found any examples where it would be an inline element.

My local newspaper uses a similar pattern: <p><strong>...</strong></p>.
<http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/nelsonmail/4223173a6510.html>
(To future readers: this link probably will have died in a few months.)

Same with ZDNet News, who forget the <p> tags entirely: <b>...</b>.
<http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9584_22-6211357.html>

Except where BBC News boldens the second paragraph, these examples could all be satisfied by CSS to select the first paragraph inside the article container. I doubt any news site would deliberately make the lede a paragraph other than the first one ("burying the lede") *and* want it specially formatted.

Cheers
--
Matthew Paul Thomas
http://mpt.net.nz/

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