pile 的 4 个定义
- an assemblage of things laid or lying one upon the other: a pile of papers;a pile of bricks.
- 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.
- (8)
piled, pil·ing.
- to lay or dispose in a pile: to pile up the fallen autumn leaves.
- to accumulate or store: to pile up money; squirrels piling up nuts against the winter.
- to cover or load with a pile: He piled the wagon with hay.
piled, pil·ing.
- to accumulate, as money, debts, evidence, etc..
- 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: The snow is piling up on the roofs.
- pile on, to add or give in a plentiful or excessive manner: 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 近义词
heap, collection
wealth
gather, pack; put on top of another
由pile构成的短语
- pile into
- pile up
- make a bundle (pile)
更多pile例句
- The player whose card has a higher rank wins the turn and places both cards on the bottom of their pile.
- At tables spread out around a room, citizen scientists of all ages and all backgrounds inspected piles of scat.
- They’ll slice apples and cheese with aplomb, but if you use one to try and cut up a pile of cardboard, it’ll be dull by the end of that task.
- Right now, those piles present a fire risk and are costly to manage.
- It’s not like after 13 grains, it moves from a collection to a pile.
- What you see is a massive, well-intentioned, legal junk pile.
- The correspondent does a stand-up next to a burning pile of heroin and gets a taste of its effect.
- Hitchcock leans toward me in a conspiratorial, almost lascivious, way and says, “Let's pile on the menace.”
- Pre-sizing eliminates the opportunity to pile those taters too high.
- Inside a box I could see a pile of whips, chains, ball gags, and hoods.
- It is a lofty and richly-decorated pile of the fourteenth century; and tells of the labours and the wealth of a foreign land.
- Again the young fellow repeats his fatal "Banco," as he stakes a fresh pile of notes handed to him by the obsequious Jew.
- They soon had a large pile heaped up in the middle of the road which led through the forest.
- A-course, Mrs. Bridger got a nice little pile of money fer it, and paid Curry the balance she owed him.
- Even Konnel had a small pile before him, although he seemed to be losing some of Lilac's attention to Meadows.