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1 pile
I 1. noun1) (a (large) number of things lying on top of each other in a tidy or untidy heap; a (large) quantity of something lying in a heap: There was a neat pile of books in the corner of the room; There was pile of rubbish at the bottom of the garden.) stabel, bunke, haug2) (a large quantity, especially of money: He must have piles of money to own a car like that.) formue; haugevis med2. verb(to make a pile of (something); to put (something) in a pile: He piled the boxes on the table.) stable, dynge- pile-up- pile up II(a large pillar or stake driven into the ground as a foundation for a building, bridge etc: The entire city of Venice is built on piles.) påle, pælIII noun(the thick soft surface of carpets and some kinds of cloth eg velvet: The rug has a deep/thick pile.) lobunke--------dynge--------haug--------hop--------påleIsubst. \/paɪl\/1) stabel, bunke, haug, såte2) (hverdagslig, om mengde eller nummer) bunke, mengde, masse, haug3) (stort) bygningskompleks, stor bygning, høy bygning4) formue, mye penger, store penger5) likbål6) ( elektronikk) element, batteri7) (fysikk, gammeldags) reaktor8) ( på mynt) bakside, revers9) (gammeldags, kull) mile10) (mekanikk, metall) pakettmake a\/one's pile tjene store penger, tjene masse penger, håve inn penger, tjene en formueIIsubst. \/paɪl\/1) ( på dyr) hår, bunnhår, pels, dun, ull2) ( på tøy e.l.) loIIIsubst. \/paɪl\/1) påle, pæl, søyle2) ( på gress) blad3) ( heraldikk) spiss, kileIVverb \/paɪl\/1) stable, legge i en haug2) lasse på, laste, lesse• pile more wood on, please3) overfylle, belesse, proppe full4) samle seg, hope seg opp5) velle, presse seg6) (mekanikk, metall) paketterepile arms ( militærvesen) koble geværer, sette geværer sammen (i pyramide)be piled with være (over)lesset medpile it on legge på, overdrive, smøre for tykt påpile on the agony ( hverdagslig) beskrive\/gjøre en trist situasjon enda tristerepile up stable opp hope seg opp, samles (sjøfart, hverdagslig) gå på grunn, strande
См. также в других словарях:
crowd onto something — ˌcrowd ˈinto/ˈonto sth | ˌcrowd ˈin derived to move in large numbers into a small space • We all crowded into her office to sing ‘Happy Birthday’. Main entry: ↑crowdderived … Useful english dictionary
crowd somebody onto something — ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈinto/ˈonto sth | ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈin derived to put many people or things into a small space • Guests were crowded into the few remaining rooms. • They crowd people onto the trains. Main entry: ↑crowdderived … Useful english dictionary
crowd something onto something — ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈinto/ˈonto sth | ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈin derived to put many people or things into a small space • Guests were crowded into the few remaining rooms. • They crowd people onto the trains. Main entry: ↑crowdderived … Useful english dictionary
crowd somebody into something — ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈinto/ˈonto sth | ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈin derived to put many people or things into a small space • Guests were crowded into the few remaining rooms. • They crowd people onto the trains. Main entry: ↑crowdderived … Useful english dictionary
crowd something into something — ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈinto/ˈonto sth | ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈin derived to put many people or things into a small space • Guests were crowded into the few remaining rooms. • They crowd people onto the trains. Main entry: ↑crowdderived … Useful english dictionary
crowd somebody in — ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈinto/ˈonto sth | ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈin derived to put many people or things into a small space • Guests were crowded into the few remaining rooms. • They crowd people onto the trains. Main entry: ↑crowdderived … Useful english dictionary
crowd something in — ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈinto/ˈonto sth | ˌcrowd sb/sth ˈin derived to put many people or things into a small space • Guests were crowded into the few remaining rooms. • They crowd people onto the trains. Main entry: ↑crowdderived … Useful english dictionary
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