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third-person singular simple present unrails, present participle unrailing, simple past and past participle unrailed
(transitive) To remove the rail or railings from. quotations examples
“You are tearing pickets from innocent fences,” said Town, and proceeded to unrail a respectable fence to procure weapons wherewith to “smash the'students' heads.”
1907, Hamilton Literary Magazine - Volume 42, page 199
(transitive, intransitive, literally and figuratively) To derail. quotations examples
If this wanton attempt to unrail or overturn the engine had succeeded, eight lives would have been sacrificed.
1842, Bradshaw's Railway Gazette - Volume 2, page 152
The high flange of the former serves to keep the wagon, ever inclined to unrail in the curve, in the rail, while the flat rail gives the required gauge.
1884, Railway Record - Volume 42, Issues 1-39, page 378
Are you trying to unrail a Reagan appointee?
1986, Authorizing Appropriations for Fiscal Years 1986-1987 for the Department of State, the U.S. Information Agency, the Board of International Broadcasting, and for Other Purposes
Notwithstanding evidence like that and so much others that we have raised, the fact of the matter is we still have people, it seems, within certain sectors of the administration who want to unrail the President's stated policy, a policy that he has stated both publicly and in private.
1995, The Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of 1995