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- nounpile (noun) · piles (plural noun) · atomic pile (noun) · atomic piles (plural noun)
- a heap of things laid or lying one on top of another:"he placed the books in a neat pile" · "tottering piles of dirty dishes"
- informala large amount of something:"he's making piles of money"
- archaica funeral pyre.
- a large imposing building or group of buildings:"a Victorian Gothic pile"
- a series of plates of dissimilar metals laid one on another alternately to produce an electric current.
- dateda nuclear reactor.
verbpile (verb) · piles (third person present) · piled (past tense) · piled (past participle) · piling (present participle)- place (things) one on top of another:"she piled all the groceries on the counter"
- (be piled with)be stacked or loaded with:"his in-box was piled high with papers"
- (of a group of people) get into or out of a vehicle or space in a disorganized manner:"ten of us piled into the minibus" · "we all piled in and headed off to our mysterious destination" · "my students piled out of three cars"
- (pile into)(of a vehicle) crash into:"60 cars piled into each other on I-95"
Originlate Middle English: from Old French, from Latin pila ‘pillar, pier’.nounpile (noun) · piles (plural noun)- a heavy beam or post driven vertically into the bed of a river, soft ground, etc., to support the foundations of a structure.
- heraldrya triangular charge or ordinary formed by two lines meeting at an acute angle, usually pointing down from the top of the shield.
verbpile (verb) · piles (third person present) · piled (past tense) · piled (past participle) · piling (present participle)- strengthen or support (a structure) with piles:"an earlier bridge may have been piled"
OriginOld English pīl ‘dart, arrow’, also ‘pointed stake’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch pijl and German Pfeil, from Latin pilum ‘(heavy) javelin’.nounpile (noun) · piles (plural noun)- the soft projecting surface of a carpet or a fabric such as velvet or flannel, consisting of many small threads:"the thick pile of the new rugs" · "deep-pile carpets"
verb(-piled)pile (verb) · piles (third person present) · piling (present participle) · piled (past tense) · piled (past participle) · -piled (adjective)- furnish with a pile:"a thick-piled carpet"
OriginMiddle English (in the sense ‘downy feather’): from Latin pilus ‘hair’. The current sense dates from the mid 16th century.Similar and Opposite Wordsnounverb- place (things) one on top of another:
- (of a group of people) get into or out of a vehicle or space in a disorganized manner:
noun- a heavy beam or post driven vertically into the bed of a river, soft ground, etc., to support the foundations of a structure.
Bokep
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WEB1 day ago · Learn the various meanings and uses of the word pile in English, with synonyms, examples, and pronunciation. Find out how to say pile in different contexts, such as building, fabric, money, or verb.
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