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pile
1[ pahyl ]
noun
- an assemblage of things laid or lying one upon the other:
a pile of papers;
a pile of bricks.
Synonyms: batch, mound, stack, accumulation, heap, collection, mass
- Informal. a large number, quantity, or amount of anything:
a pile of work.
- a heap of wood on which a dead body, a living person, or a sacrifice is burned; pyre.
- a lofty or large building or group of buildings:
the noble pile of Windsor Castle.
- Informal. a large accumulation of money:
They made a pile on Wall Street.
- a bundle of pieces of iron ready to be welded and drawn out into bars; fagot.
- Electricity. voltaic pile.
verb (used with object)
- to lay or dispose in a pile (often followed by up ):
to pile up the fallen autumn leaves.
- to accumulate or store (often followed by up ):
to pile up money; squirrels piling up nuts against the winter.
- to cover or load with a pile:
He piled the wagon with hay.
verb (used without object)
- to accumulate, as money, debts, evidence, etc. (usually followed by up ).
- Informal. to move as a group in a more or less confused, disorderly cluster:
to pile off a train.
- to gather, accumulate, or rise in a pile or piles (often followed by up ):
The snow is piling up on the roofs.
verb phrase
- to add or give in a plentiful or excessive manner: My mother-in-law finds a way to pile on more criticism of my life choices every time we visit.
This ice cream shop really piles on the toppings.
My mother-in-law finds a way to pile on more criticism of my life choices every time we visit.
- Sports. to jump onto the pile of bodies after an opponent has been brought to the ground and the play has been ended.
- to join a hostile group in harshly criticizing or judging a less dominant group or individual, sometimes gloating over that group’s or person's defeat or diminished standing.
pile
2[ pahyl ]
noun
- a cylindrical or flat member of wood, steel, concrete, etc., often tapered or pointed at the lower end, hammered vertically into soil to form part of a foundation or retaining wall.
- Heraldry. an ordinary in the form of a wedge or triangle coming from one edge of the escutcheon, from the chief unless otherwise specified.
- Archery. the sharp head or striking end of an arrow, usually of metal and of the form of a wedge or conical nub.
verb (used with object)
- to furnish, strengthen, or support with piles.
- to drive piles into.
pile
3[ pahyl ]
noun
- a fabric with a surface of upright yarns, cut or looped, as corduroy, Turkish toweling, velvet, and velveteen.
- such a surface.
- one of the strands in such a surface.
- soft, fine hair or down.
- wool, fur, or pelage.
pile
4[ pahyl ]
noun
- Usually piles. a hemorrhoid.
- piles, the condition of having hemorrhoids.
pile
5[ pahyl ]
noun
- the lower of two dies for coining by hand.
pile
1/ paɪl /
noun
- a long column of timber, concrete, or steel that is driven into the ground to provide a foundation for a vertical load (a bearing pile) or a group of such columns to resist a horizontal load from earth or water pressure (a sheet pile)
- heraldry an ordinary shaped like a wedge, usually displayed point-downwards
verb
- to drive (piles) into the ground
- to provide or support (a structure) with piles
pile
2/ paɪl /
noun
- a collection of objects laid on top of one another or of other material stacked vertically; heap; mound
- informal.a large amount of money (esp in the phrase make a pile )
- informal.often plural a large amount
a pile of work
- a less common word for pyre
- a large building or group of buildings
- short for voltaic pile
- physics a structure of uranium and a moderator used for producing atomic energy; nuclear reactor
- metallurgy an arrangement of wrought-iron bars that are to be heated and worked into a single bar
- the point of an arrow
verb
- often foll by up to collect or be collected into or as if into a pile
snow piled up in the drive
- intr; foll by in, into, off, out, etc to move in a group, esp in a hurried or disorganized manner
to pile off the bus
- pile armsto prop a number of rifles together, muzzles together and upwards, butts forming the base
- pile it on informal.to exaggerate
pile
3/ paɪl /
noun
- textiles
- the yarns in a fabric that stand up or out from the weave, as in carpeting, velvet, flannel, etc
- one of these yarns
- soft fine hair, fur, wool, etc
Word History and Origins
Origin of pile1
Origin of pile2
Origin of pile3
Word History and Origins
Origin of pile1
Origin of pile2
Origin of pile3
Idioms and Phrases
- in pile, Heraldry. (of a number of charges) arranged in the manner of a pile.
More idioms and phrases containing pile
- make a bundle (pile)
Example Sentences
Assethold said: "Rubbish piles up due to various short lets and abuse by the residents which means waste is constantly dumped in the property."
But, in a further embarrassment, he felt compelled to give up his country pile, Dorneywood, after being pictured on its lawns playing croquet with his staff - an image at odds with his down-to-earth reputation.
We are approaching the first time of the season when managers have to juggle their first-team squads as the fixtures start to pile up.
People whisked around Hudson pulling wagons piled high with blooms or balancing large bundles of bouquets on their shoulders.
On Santa Clara Street, city crews swept in Nov. 1 to clear out tents, belongings and piles of trash.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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