释义 |
pile out Thesauruspilenoun1. A group of things gathered haphazardly:agglomeration, bank, cumulus, drift, heap, hill, mass, mess, mound, mountain, shock, stack, tumble.2. Informal. A great deal:abundance, mass, mountain, much, plenty, profusion, wealth, world.Informal: barrel, heap, lot, pack, peck.Regional: power, sight.3. Slang. A large sum of money:fortune, mint.Informal: bundle, pretty penny, tidy sum, wad.4. A usually permanent construction, such as a house or store:building, edifice, structure.verb1. To put into a disordered pile.Also used with up:bank, drift, heap, hill, lump, mound, stack.2. To make or become full; put as much into as can be held:charge, fill, freight, heap, load, pack.3. To fill to overflowing:heap, lade, load.4. To leave one's bed:arise, get up, rise, roll out.Informal: turn out.Idiom: rise and shine.phrasal verb pile up1. To bring together so as to increase in mass or number:accrue, accumulate, agglomerate, aggregate, amass, collect, cumulate, garner, gather, hive, roll up.2. Informal. To undergo wrecking:crash, smash.Informal: crack up.Translationspile out
pile out (of something)To exit or disembark from something in a rough, disorderly fashion. Jake and his friends piled out of the van to go to soccer practice. We need to count heads as you leave the bus, so don't everyone pile out all at once!See also: out, pilepile out (of something)[for many people] to get out of something roughly. Okay, kids, pile out! The car door burst open, and the children piled out.See also: out, pilepile outv. To exit something or some place in a disorderly mass or group: When we reached the store, the kids piled out of the van. I opened the door and the crowd piled out.See also: out, pileEncyclopediaSeepile |