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third rail
[thurd reyl]
noun
Railroads.
a rail laid parallel and adjacent to the running rails of an electrified railroad to provide electric current to the motors of a car or locomotive through contact shoes.
an additional running rail laid on the same ties as the two regular rails of a railroad track to provide a multigauge capability.
a controversial topic or issue in the public sphere that people, especially politicians, try to avoid discussing (often used attributively): Doping is the third rail of the Olympics.
a third-rail subject;
Doping is the third rail of the Olympics.
Social Security is the third rail of American politics.
third rail
noun
an extra rail from which an electric train picks up current by means of a sliding collector to feed power to its motors
politics
a cause or topic that is considered extremely dangerous for a person to support or comment on
( as modifier )
a third-rail issue
Word History and Origins
Origin of third rail1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
He called for stricter requirements around firearms, a subject that has been a third rail for the GOP since time out of mind.
Lehotsky argued plainly that “It’s the constitutional third rail, or it should be, for the government to insist it can engage in viewpoint discrimination.”
While we’re making the show and while Dan and the writers are putting it together, there’s sort of this invisible third rail.
“You can touch this mythical third rail and live to see another day.”
They are not called the third rail for nothing.
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