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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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