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  1. Dictionary
    pile
    /pʌɪl/

    noun

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 1. : a long slender column usually of timber, steel, or reinforced concrete driven into the ground to carry a vertical load. … thus Ellet reported that the riverbed was … firm enough to drive piles into for the foundations of piers. Henry Petroski. 2. : a wedge-shaped heraldic charge usually placed vertically with the broad end up. 3. a.

  3. PILE definition: 1. objects positioned one on top of another: 2. a mass of something that has been placed…. Learn more.

  4. Piles are wooden, concrete, or metal posts which are pushed into the ground and on which buildings or bridges are built. Piles are often used in very wet areas so that the buildings do not flood.

  5. [countable] a large wooden, metal or stone post that is fixed into the ground and used to support a building, bridge, etc. [countable] (formal or humorous) a large impressive building. a Victorian pile built as a private hospital. her family's ancestral pile. Topics Houses and homes c2. Word Origin. Idioms. (at the) bottom/top of the pile.

  6. A pile is a heap of stuff that keeps accumulating, like the dirty laundry in the back of your closet, or Uncle Scrooge’s money. Pile can be used as a noun or a verb. If you pile rocks on top of each other, you will eventually have a...pile of rocks.

  7. an amount of a substance in the shape of a small hill or a number of objects on top of each other: a pile of books / bricks. a pile of sand / rubbish. The clothes were arranged in piles on the floor. Fewer examples. He left his clothes in a muddled pile in the corner. He hid the letter beneath a pile of papers.

  8. Pile definition: an assemblage of things laid or lying one upon the other. See examples of PILE used in a sentence.

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