Derail in a sentence as a verb

* its pretty obvious who, but I don't want to derail.

I don't mean to rant or derail the topic, and apologies if I do.

But too often they tend to be averse to innovation and derail progress.

I feel feel badly for them sure, but I don't think it will derail this particular technology bloom.

A mistake made early on can bring a future company to it's knees and derail projects years after it was made.

Entirely a ploy by another altcoin to try and derail Dogecoin.

Don't try and derail this one, because it's relevant to many, many people, and it's a serious issue in this industry.

Trying to derail it because musicians are finding it hard to sell CDs is selfish at best and borderline psychopathic at worst.

But it often ends up being a massive distracting derail preventing others from trying to answer the question I was actually asking in the first place.

He's directly looking to derail someone's career by preventing them from seizing an opportunity he's not willing to give them.

I can't stop thinking that this was a top-secret hit job by some shady character working for the hotel industry looking to derail AirBnB's next fund-raising round.

Mr. Watts was embarrassing to watch -- his slanted opinion and childish domination of the dialogue was less than coy. I grew sick to my stomach listening to him constantly derail Oyama's statements.

I wasn't even the one interested in the position, is this level of unprofessionalism common with Google?Sorry don't mean to derail the comments, but it just kind of left me with a bad taste in my mouth.

By insisting on the accuracy of the morbidity statistics of real-world minefields you're intentionally confusing the point and trying to derail the discussion.

Derail definitions

verb

cause to run off the tracks; "they had planned to derail the trains that carried atomic waste"

verb

run off or leave the rails; "the train derailed because a cow was standing on the tracks"

See also: jump