derail|derailed|derailing|derails in English
verb
[de·rail || dɪ'reɪl]
cause to run off the rails (as in a train); sabotage, throw off course
Use "derail|derailed|derailing|derails" in a sentence
1. Circumstances had conspired to derail her, as they had derailed almost everyone else she knew.
2. Case 7: Derailed.
3. The Brogrammer’s Guide to Derailing
4. Your train derailed.
5. I almost derailed your career, pissed everyone off.
6. Blockade aimed at derailing parliamentary elections paralyses much of the country.
7. An open switch will derail a train.
8. Radicals are trying to derail the peace process.
9. You think I'm going to derail this?
10. They can boost or derail any decision.
11. I am like this because you derailed my life.
12. A mainline railway train was derailed by the car.
13. The market's job is derail the systems traders.
14. When Concretized emotion-belief complexes derail decision-making capacity
15. When Concretized emotion-belief complexes derail decision-making capacity Bioethics
16. Withdrawing support too soon could derail a recovery.
17. The fool nearly derailed the invocation with his insolence.
18. 9 Renewed fighting threatens to derail the peace talks.
19. The train was derailed and a section of track has to be repaired.
20. Could the current global crisis derail the Party's strategy?
21. However, two important developments occurred to derail the peace process.
22. An abrupt tightening of global financing conditions could derail the expansion.
23. The train was derailed but there were no casualties, police said.
24. You can't let sentimentality derail everything that we've worked so hard for.
25. Obfuscation would result in damaging market noise and further derail the real economy.