You queried:

pile "

Results retrieved for:
    • \ ˈpī(-ə)l \

    Your query is not considered offensive by any official sources.

    ( some results may take a moment to update )


    [Noun]  | "pile" | \ ˈpī(-ə)l \


    1: a long slender column usually of timber, steel, or reinforced concrete driven into the ground to carry a vertical load

    2: a wedge-shaped heraldic charge usually placed vertically with the broad end up

    3: a target-shooting arrowhead without cutting edges


    Origin: 12th century ;

     Middle English, dart, quill, pole driven into the ground, from Old English pīl, from Latin pilum javelin;

    [Noun]  | "pile" 


    1: a quantity of things or people heaped together

    2: a heap of wood for burning a corpse or a sacrifice

    3: any great number or quantity : lot


    Origin: 15th century ;

     Middle English pier of a bridge, stack, heap, from Middle French pille pier of a bridge, from Latin pila pillar;

    [Noun]  | "pile" 


    1: a coat or surface of usually short close fine furry hairs

    2: a velvety surface produced by an extra set of filling yarns that form raised loops which are cut and sheared


    Origin: 15th century ;

     Middle English, in plural piles "hair, plumage," borrowed from Anglo-French peil, pil "hair, coat of animal hair, cloth with thick nap" (continental Old French peil, poil "hair"), going back to Latin pilus "hair," of obscure origin;

      * Note : Anglo-French pil for peil, apparently yielding long in Middle English, is exceptional. The Oxford English Dictionary, third edition, proposes that the word is "partly" borrowed directly from Latin. Middle English Dictionary suggests borrowing from Middle Dutch pijl.;

    [Noun]  | "pile" 


    1: a single hemorrhoid

    2: hemorrhoids


    Origin: 15th century ;

     Middle English pilez, plural, from Medieval Latin pili, perhaps from Latin pila ball;

    [Noun]  | "pile driver" 


    1: a machine for driving piles into the ground

    2: a person who operates a pile driver

    3: a forceful hit or kick (as of a ball)


    Origin: 1744 ;

    [Verb]  | "pile" 


    1: to drive piles into


    Origin: 15th century ;

    [Verb]  | "pile" 


    1: to lay or place in a pile : stack

    2: to heap in abundance : load

    3: to collect little by little into a mass —usually used with up


    Origin: 14th century ;

     Middle English, from {see: |pile:4|pile:4};

    [Phrasal verb]  | "pile in" 


    1: to move into a place or vehicle quickly

    [Phrasal verb]  | "pile on" 


    1: to join other people in criticizing something or someone in usually an unfair way

    [Phrasal verb]  | "pile out" 


    1: to move out of a place or a vehicle quickly

    [Noun]  | "pile" 


    1: a quantity of things thrown or stacked on one another;


      * e.g., " ... a large pile of newspapers that needed to be disposed of "





    2: a considerable amount;


      * e.g., " ... a job that paid piles of money "





    3: a very large amount of money;


      * e.g., " ... she made a pile in the stock market just before it headed south "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Noun]  | "pile" 


    1: a soft airy substance or covering;


      * e.g., " ... the lush pile of the carpeting "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    2: the hairy covering of a mammal especially when fine, soft, and thick;


      * e.g., " ... a dog with such a dense pile that he never minded the cold "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "pile" 


    1: to lay or throw on top of one another;


      * e.g., " ... piled all the clothes on the chair before putting them away "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    2: to gather into a closely packed group;


      * e.g., " ... the kids piled into the car "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "pile (up)" 


    1: to gradually form into a layer, pile, or mass;


      * e.g., " ... snow piling up in the driveway at a rapid pace "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "pile" ]

    1: anything that is a piece of shit, somthing that crappy,old or broken..

      * e.g.,  ... Dude your car is a pile. (meaning your car is a piece of shit)Can even mean a person who is lazy or just a waste of life) 

     [ "pile" ]

    1: To sit on the couch in semi darkness for hours on end, ordering food, consuming various and sundry pills, avioding all cell phone calls, while being in a state of semi dress and watching massive amounts of TV (if one can retain consiousness).

      * e.g.,  ... Bob hasn't come out of his apartment in two days, what a pile. 

     [ "pile" ]

    1: Someone that that sits around on the couch and smokes a shit load of weed.

      * e.g.,  ... That guy is such a pile, he hasnt come out if his house for 3 days. 

     [ "pile" ]

    1: Acronym for "Potentially Inebriated Lifeless Equipment." Can be used to describe anything in a state of disrepair or complete inoperability. The word pile can also be used to reference animal feces, or a "steaming pile."

      * e.g.,  ... "Man, that car is a pile!" 

     [ "pile" ]

    1: A former friend, being influenced by another negativly. A complete && utter waste of time. Someone who is constantly flaking, being gay, decietful, sneaky, && lieing. Pretty much being a tiny speck on the distant coast of sanity. Someone who is constantly the hot g

      * e.g.,  ... Alex: Naw ii have to go do chores. 

     [ "pile" ]

    1:  A specimen of incoherent architecture.

      * e.g.,  ...  The Gellert is that Art Nouveau, Neo-Gothic Turkic revival pile on the Donau. 


     [ "pile" ]

    2:  'Roids, in the plural.

      * e.g.,  ...  That three legged beaver got piles from the hot seat. 


     [ "pile" ]

    3:  Short for pile o' shit, used esp. with potentially dangerous machinery.

      * e.g.,  ...  Effin Aeoflot pile, thought we would die, duct tape on the fuselage... 

     [ "pile" ]

    1: A loser, someone who literally does nothing. Someone who thinks they're tough; worthless.

      * e.g.,  ... Kids literally taking his shirt off and flexing in the courtyard trying to act tough in front of the girls, what an absolute pile. 

     [ "pile" ]

    1:  A loose assortment of material, gathered into and construed as a single entity. The contents of a pile are usually explicitly stated or implicitly understood to be undesirable (i.e. trash, shit, ass, maggots, gaywads).

      * e.g.,  ... Yeah, he's a fucking pile. Left me all his work to finish. I'mma leave him a surprise. 


     [ "pile" ]

    2:  A person who either functionally or essentially resembles the aforementioned.

     [ "pile" ]

    1: To have sex

      * e.g.,  ... when talking about a ho (but not always) 


     [ "pile" ]

    2: To fuck some chick

      * e.g.,  ... "we're gonna go Pile" 


     [ "pile" ]

    3: or to fuck a guy

      * e.g.,  ... "did you pile her last night?" 

     [ "pile" ]

    1: Used when a group know as the "rockpile" attacks its enemies. It is a verb. To pile on some peckawoods. You pile on people that have disrespected your crew, or if you just feel like throwin mad hands. Often happens on briar forest.

      * e.g.,  ... drew: Yo that kid with two gay dads is talkin shit to me and that boi stevie! 

     No results from Words API...

     No results from Linguatools Conjugations API...

     No results from Words API...

     No results from Word Associations API...


    * Query The Library of Babel *
    * Query Wikipedia *
    * Query Google *

    * Discuss! *


    You must be signed in to post comments!


    Top comments for:
    "pile"