B1 noun/verb #31 am häufigsten 2 Min. Lesezeit

pile

A pile is a messy stack of things, or the act of putting things into a stack.

Erklärung auf deinem Niveau:

A pile is a group of things on top of each other. Think of a pile of books. You can put things in a pile. It is easy to use! You can say 'Look at the pile of toys.' If you have many things, you can say 'I have a big pile of clothes.' It is a very useful word for your home.

When you have many items, you can put them in a pile. It is common to say 'a pile of papers' or 'a pile of dishes'. As a verb, you can say 'Please pile the boxes in the corner.' It is a simple way to talk about organizing or storing things in a stack. Remember, a pile is usually not very neat!

In intermediate English, pile is used to describe both physical objects and abstract concepts. You might hear 'a pile of work' to mean you are very busy. The phrasal verb 'pile up' is very useful; for example, 'My emails are piling up.' It suggests that things are increasing in number and perhaps becoming a bit overwhelming or messy.

At this level, you can use pile in more figurative ways. We talk about 'piles of money' or 'piling on the pressure'. The distinction between a 'stack' (which implies order) and a 'pile' (which implies mess) becomes important. You might also use it in a professional context, such as 'The reports are piling up on my desk,' indicating a backlog of tasks.

Advanced users utilize pile to describe complex situations. You might describe a 'pile-up' of events, or use the word to imply a chaotic accumulation of social or economic factors. It is often used in journalism or academic writing to describe the rapid gathering of resources or the sudden, disorganized arrival of people in a specific location.

At the mastery level, pile can be used with nuance to describe the entropy of a situation. It conveys a sense of disorder that contrasts with 'arrangement' or 'organization'. Historically, the word has roots in architectural supports, and in literary contexts, it can be used to evoke a sense of weight or burden—a 'pile' of memories or a 'pile' of responsibilities that one must carry. It is a word of both physical presence and metaphorical weight.

Wort in 30 Sekunden

  • A pile is a messy heap of objects.
  • It can be used as a noun or a verb.
  • It often implies disorder or accumulation.
  • Commonly used in phrasal verbs like 'pile up'.

When you hear the word pile, think of a messy stack. Whether it is a pile of laundry on your chair or a pile of documents on a desk, the word implies that items are stacked together, usually without much order.

As a verb, to pile means to stack things up. You might 'pile up' your books after finishing homework. It can also describe people moving quickly into a space, like when students 'pile into' a bus.

The word pile has a fascinating history. It comes from the Latin word pila, which meant 'pillar' or 'pier'. Over centuries, it evolved through Old French and Middle English to mean a heap of things.

Interestingly, it is also related to the word pillar. While a pillar is a sturdy, organized support, a pile is the more chaotic, messy cousin of that structure. It reflects how language shifts from rigid shapes to general collections.

You will use pile in daily life constantly. It is very common to say 'a pile of work' or 'a pile of money'. It is neutral in register, meaning you can use it with friends or in a workplace setting.

Common collocations include 'pile up' for tasks that are accumulating, or 'pile into' when talking about a crowd of people entering a vehicle or room. It is much more informal than 'accumulate' or 'stack'.

1. Pile it on: To exaggerate or add unnecessary pressure. 'Don't pile it on, I already know I'm late!'

2. Pile-up: A crash involving several vehicles. 'There was a massive pile-up on the highway.'

3. Make a pile: To earn a lot of money. 'He made a real pile in the tech industry.'

4. Pile on the agony: To make a bad situation feel worse. 'She kept complaining, really piling on the agony.'

5. Pile in: To enter a space in a group. 'Everyone pile in, we are leaving now!'

As a noun, pile is countable; the plural is piles. As a verb, it is regular: pile, piles, piling, piled.

The pronunciation is /paɪl/. It rhymes with smile, tile, mile, while, and file. The stress is always on the single syllable. When using it as a verb, it is often followed by prepositions like up, on, or into.

Wusstest du?

It used to refer to a heavy stake driven into the ground.

Aussprachehilfe

UK /paɪl/

Short 'i' sound, clear 'l' at the end.

US /paɪl/

Slightly more nasal 'i'.

Häufige Fehler

  • Pronouncing it like 'pill'
  • Ignoring the 'l' sound
  • Adding extra syllables

Reimt sich auf

smile tile mile while file

Schwierigkeitsgrad

Lesen 1/5

easy

Schreiben 1/5

easy

Sprechen 1/5

easy

Hören 1/5

easy

Was du als Nächstes lernen solltest

Voraussetzungen

stack group thing

Als Nächstes lernen

accumulate clutter heap

Fortgeschritten

backlog congestion

Wichtige Grammatik

Countable Nouns

one pile, two piles

Phrasal Verbs

pile up

Imperative Mood

Pile them here!

Beispiele nach Niveau

1

There is a pile of books.

pile = heap

singular noun

2

I have a pile of toys.

pile = collection

possession

3

Put the clothes in a pile.

pile = stack

imperative

4

The pile is very big.

pile = heap

adjective

5

He made a pile.

made = built

past tense

6

Look at that pile!

look = see

exclamation

7

Is this a pile?

is = question

question

8

I see a pile.

see = observe

verb

1

The leaves are in a big pile.

2

Please pile the wood here.

3

My desk has a pile of papers.

4

Don't pile your shoes there.

5

The kids pile into the car.

6

He has a pile of homework.

7

I found a pile of coins.

8

We saw a pile of snow.

1

Work is really piling up today.

2

There was a pile-up on the M4.

3

He made a pile of money selling cars.

4

She piled the plates in the sink.

5

The guests piled into the room.

6

Don't pile on the pressure.

7

I have a pile of emails to answer.

8

The laundry is piling up again.

1

The evidence is piling up against him.

2

They piled into the bus in a hurry.

3

He has a whole pile of excuses.

4

The problems are starting to pile up.

5

She piled the gifts on the table.

6

We watched the cars pile up at the junction.

7

He's got a pile of debt to pay off.

8

Don't pile it on, I understand.

1

The bureaucratic errors are piling up.

2

They piled into the conference room.

3

A pile of historical documents was found.

4

She felt the weight of the piling tasks.

5

The sheer pile of data was overwhelming.

6

He watched the debris pile up after the storm.

7

They piled their belongings into the truck.

8

The accusations continued to pile up.

1

The metaphorical pile of his past failures.

2

He watched the years pile up in silence.

3

A chaotic pile of memories surfaced.

4

The societal pressures piled up on the youth.

5

They piled their hopes into the new project.

6

The dust had piled up over the decades.

7

A pile of contradictions defined his life.

8

The wealth piled up in offshore accounts.

Häufige Kollokationen

pile up
pile of laundry
pile of papers
pile into
a big pile
pile of money
piling on
neat pile
pile of debris
pile of clothes

Redewendungen & Ausdrücke

"pile it on"

to exaggerate

He really piled it on when describing his trip.

casual

"pile-up"

a multi-vehicle crash

The traffic is slow due to a pile-up.

neutral

"make a pile"

to earn a lot of money

She made a pile in real estate.

casual

"pile on the agony"

to emphasize suffering

Don't pile on the agony.

casual

"pile in"

to enter as a group

Everyone pile in the van!

casual

"a pile of"

a large amount

I have a pile of work to do.

neutral

Leicht verwechselbar

pile vs. pill

similar sound

pill is medicine

Take a pill / A pile of books.

pile vs. peel

similar sound

peel is for fruit

Peel the apple / A pile of fruit.

pile vs. pale

similar sound

pale is a color

He is pale / A pile of paper.

pile vs. stack

similar meaning

stack is neat

A stack of plates / A pile of trash.

Satzmuster

A2

Subject + pile + object + up

He piled the boxes up.

B1

Subject + pile + into + place

They piled into the room.

A1

There is a pile of + noun

There is a pile of trash.

B2

Subject + pile + on + pressure

Don't pile on the pressure.

A2

Subject + pile + noun + together

We piled the wood together.

Wortfamilie

Substantive

piler someone who piles things

Verben

pile to stack

Adjektive

piled already in a stack

Verwandt

pillar etymological cousin

So verwendest du es

frequency

8

Förmlichkeitsskala

formal: accumulation neutral: pile casual: heap slang: junk pile

Tipps

💡

Memory Palace

Visualize a pile of laundry on your bed.
💡

Native Speakers

Use it for anything that is accumulating.
🌍

Cultural Insight

Often used in news for traffic.
💡

Grammar Shortcut

Always use 'up' with 'pile' for tasks.
💡

Say It Right

Keep the 'i' sound long like 'eye'.
💡

Don't Make This Mistake

Don't confuse it with 'pill'.
💡

Did You Know?

It comes from the Latin for pillar.
💡

Study Smart

Write 5 sentences about your desk.
💡

Collocation

Always say 'pile of' something.
💡

Verb Pattern

Use 'pile into' for groups.

Einprägen

Eselsbrücke

P-I-L-E: Put Items Literally Everywhere.

Visuelle Assoziation

A giant mountain of laundry.

Word Web

stack mess heap collection accumulation

Herausforderung

Describe a messy room using 'pile' five times.

Wortherkunft

Latin

Ursprüngliche Bedeutung: pillar or pier

Kultureller Kontext

None

Commonly used in household and office settings.

'Pile of bones' (various idioms) Traffic pile-ups in news

Im Alltag üben

Kontexte aus dem Alltag

at home

  • pile of laundry
  • pile of dishes
  • pile of books

at work

  • pile of papers
  • work is piling up
  • pile of tasks

travel

  • pile into the bus
  • pile into the car
  • pile of luggage

construction

  • pile of dirt
  • pile of bricks
  • pile of debris

Gesprächseinstiege

"What is the biggest pile you have ever seen?"

"Do you like to keep your desk in a pile or organized?"

"Have you ever been in a car where everyone had to pile in?"

"What do you do when your work starts to pile up?"

"Do you prefer a neat stack or a messy pile?"

Tagebuch-Impulse

Describe a time you had to clean up a giant pile.

Write about a situation where things were piling up on you.

If you had a pile of money, what would you do?

Describe your room using the word pile.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

8 Fragen
Yes, you can have one pile or many piles.
Yes, usually as 'pile into' a room.
It is neutral and used everywhere.
Stack is neat; pile is messy.
Just add 's' to make it 'piles'.
Yes, 'a pile of money' is a common idiom.
No, it rhymes with mile.
Yes, it follows standard conjugation.

Teste dich selbst

fill blank A1

The ___ of books is big.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: pile

Singular noun needed.

multiple choice A2

Which means to stack?

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: pile

Pile is the action.

true false B1

A pile is usually very neat.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Falsch

Piles are often messy.

match pairs B1

Word

Bedeutung

Alles zugeordnet!

Phrasal verbs.

sentence order B2

Tippe auf die Wörter unten, um den Satz zu bilden
Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort:

Subject-verb-object.

Ergebnis: /5

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