ride the rails
English
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Verb
ride the rails (third-person singular simple present rides the rails, present participle riding the rails, simple past rode the rails, past participle ridden the rails)
- (idiomatic) To travel by railway train, trolley, etc.
- 1935 May 13, “Gas Man's Trial”, in Time:
- He had bummed his way around the West riding the rails.
- 1956 December 19, Phyllis Battelle, “Poor Commuter's Life Not So Dreadful After All”, in St. Petersburg Times, retrieved 11 May 2009:
- Many of New York's most celebrated personalities hitch-hiked here, or rode the rails from wherever it was that they spent their youth dreaming ambitiously.
- 2004 April 4, Susan Stellin, “J.F.K. by AirTrain: Bag the Bus”, in New York Times, retrieved 11 May 2009:
- There are a number of variables in the trip from Manhattan that you should weigh when deciding whether to ride the rails ($7 to $12), hop a bus ($13) or spring for a taxi (roughly $45, with toll and tip).
Usage notes
- Sometimes used to denote travelling illegally by hiding on railway freight cars, especially as a hobo during the Great Depression.
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