The courageous Marines led the attack with lead.
We just need one good volunteer to lead us now that he who led us is gone.
I led the stubborn mule with a very long lead.
There is no more lead in my pencil.
Good actions lead to good consequences.
The baby has blond hair
The forbidding chapter lead such a curiosity among the students
No it is not a good sentence would be Movement is what my friends and i enjoy.
Spartan currency was made of lead.
The clay statue was then clad in lead.
If you have to ask, no it is not OK to use 50 words in a sentence. There are times and conditions when a good author can get away with it. One idea would need to lead into another and then into another. It would need to lead the reader from inaction to action. The reader would give out a gasp of air when he finished as if he had reached a pinnacle. You could not have any relative clauses. Such would be difficult to pull off. It could be done. It is not recommended. Still, a good writer uses the language. He is not used by the language.
The word graphite is a noun. An example of a sentence using the word would be: While pencils were originally made using lead, they are now mostly made using graphite (which is non-toxic).
The art of stillnees is mirrored in the way life is lead
exclamatory sentence with lead metal
No, it is not. The term "would lead" is a conditional verb form. E.g. Any delay would lead to failure.