Rail in a sentence as a noun

They rail against the fat, then when furloughs happened last year railed against that.

I don't know if I ever want to work in a language that doesn't have proper type safety as a guard rail.

For example, you can put railway tracks up on pylons, too, with very little impact on the ground.

I used to work in a railway museum and when we didn't have an engine in steam we'd do our shunting with crowbars.

Location is a primary reason why Musk can claim Hyperloop will be cheaper than high speed rail.

Social Security is the third rail of American politics: If you touch it, you will die.

Making the rail networks cheaper, as the author seems to advocate, would only increase this effect.

Many of his reasons why his hyperloop is superior to high speed rail are not specific to the hyperloop.

Rail in a sentence as a verb

It is definitely an idea worth exploring, but I think it falls far short as a serious alternative to the current high speed rail plans.

" That was annoying and I'm not going to send my kids to public school in part because of it, but I didn't rail against the teacher for being a selfish monopolist.

Every lot within 500m of a rail station should automatically be zoned to allow for 6-story buildings and ground-level retail.

"In the case of the Hyperloop, Musk started focusing on public transportation after he grew disenchanted with the plans for Californias high-speed rail system.

I suspect she did, and I suspect it contributes to the negative stereotypes that the author wanted to rail against by mentioning all this.> Do you know where the proxy settings are?

The story highlights something I think anti-rail proponents always miss: the lifetime of this infrastructure is far beyond what ordinary businesses deal with.

You don't have to like it, you can rail against it the rest of your life, and fight the good fight; and Android will continue to dominate, and it will have absolutely nothing to do with issues related to fragmentation.

Wedge the point of the bent end between the tread and rail, so the "elbow" is resting an inch or two behind the wheel and the bar is up at a 45 degree angle, so forming a lever with a lot of mechanical advantage.

Rail definitions

noun

a barrier consisting of a horizontal bar and supports

See also: railing

noun

short for railway; "he traveled by rail"; "he was concerned with rail safety"

noun

a bar or pair of parallel bars of rolled steel making the railway along which railroad cars or other vehicles can roll

See also: track rails runway

noun

a horizontal bar (usually of wood or metal)

noun

any of numerous widely distributed small wading birds of the family Rallidae having short wings and very long toes for running on soft mud

verb

complain bitterly

See also: inveigh

verb

enclose with rails; "rail in the old graves"

verb

provide with rails; "The yard was railed"

verb

separate with a railing; "rail off the crowds from the Presidential palace"

verb

convey (goods etc.) by rails; "fresh fruit are railed from Italy to Belgium"

verb

travel by rail or train; "They railed from Rome to Venice"; "She trained to Hamburg"

See also: train

verb

lay with rails; "hundreds of miles were railed out here"

verb

fish with a handline over the rails of a boat; "They are railing for fresh fish"

verb

spread negative information about; "The Nazi propaganda vilified the Jews"

See also: vilify revile vituperate

verb

criticize severely; "He fulminated against the Republicans' plan to cut Medicare"; "She railed against the bad social policies"

See also: fulminate