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Rail at Meaning in English

expression

ˈɹeɪɫ/ /ˈæt
RAYL-at
ɹˈeɪl/ /ˈæt
rayl-AT

Definition

To speak or complain very angrily or loudly about someone or something that you dislike or think is wrong.

Usage & Nuances

A formal or literary phrase. Usually implies passionate, angry criticism or protest, often repeated. Often followed by 'at' plus the target (person, idea, situation). Less common in daily speech; more seen in writing, literature, or elevated discussion. Similar to 'rant against' or 'berate'.

Example Sentences

The mayor railed at the unfair criticism.

basic

He always rails at politicians on TV.

basic

The teacher railed at the noisy students.

basic

People love to rail at bad customer service online these days.

natural

She spent the afternoon railing at the delays in public transport.

natural

If you keep railing at your coworkers, nobody will want to work with you.

natural