PILE vs HEAP: NOUN
- A very large building or complex of buildings.
- The pointed head of a staff, pike, arrow, or the like, when not barbed, generally of a rounded form and serving as a ferrule; also, an arrow.
- A javelin.
- [The above is an imitation of the following passage:
- A pointed stake; specifically, in architecture and engineering, a beam, heavy, generally of timber, often the roughly trimmed trunk of a tree, pointed or not at the end and driven into the soil for the support of some superstructure or to form part of a wall, as of a Coffer-dam or quay.
- A funeral pyre.
- A column of wood or steel or concrete that is driven into the ground to provide support for a structure
- A collection of objects laid on top of each other
- A large sum of money (especially as pay or profit)
- (often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent
- Battery consisting of voltaic cells arranged in series; the earliest electric battery devised by Volta
- Fine soft dense hair (as the fine short hair of cattle or deer or the wool of sheep or the undercoat of certain dogs)
- A nuclear reactor that uses controlled nuclear fission to generate energy
- A heavy beam of timber, concrete, or steel, driven into the earth as a foundation or support for a structure.
- A voltaic pile.
- A Roman javelin.
- Cut or uncut loops of yarn forming the surface of certain fabrics, such as velvet, plush, and carpeting.
- The surface so formed.
- Soft fine hair, fur, or wool.
- A quantity of objects stacked or thrown together in a heap. : heap.
- A large accumulation or quantity.
- A large amount of money.
- A nuclear reactor.
- A post such as that used in the exercise of the quintain.
- A wedge-shaped charge pointing downward.
- A heap consisting of an indefinite number of separate objects, commonly of the same kind, arranged of purpose or by natural causes in a more or less regular (cubical, pyramidal, cylindrical, or conical) form; a large mass, or a large quantity: as, a pile of stones; a pile of wood; a pile of money or of grain.
- Hair.
- A pyramid; a pyramidal figure; specifically, in heraldry, a bearing consisting of a pyramidal or wedge-shaped figure (generally assumed to represent an arrow-head), which, unless otherwise blazoned, seems to emerge from the top of the escutcheon with its point downward. It is usually considered one of the subordinaries, but by some authors as an ordinary. See pile, 1, and phrases below.
- A large building or mass of buildings of stone or brick; a massive edifice: as, a noble pile; a venerable pile.
- A tower or castle: same as peel.
- A pillar; specifically, a small pillar of iron, en- graved on the top with the image to be given to the under side of a coin stamped upon it; hence, the under side or reverse of the coin itself: opposed to the cross.
- A large amount of money: a fortune: as, he has made his pile.
- In electricity, a series of plates of two dissimilar metals, such as copper and zinc, laid one above the other alternately, with cloth or paper placed between each pair, moistened with an acid solution, for producing a current of electricity. See electricity.
- An oblong rectangular mass of cut lengths of puddled bars of iron, laid together and ready for being rolled after being raised to a welding-temperature in a reheating-furnace.
- Specifically A funeral pile; a pyre. See funeral pile, under funeral.
- The yarn (as in a rug or velvet or corduroy) that stands up from the weave
- A collection of things laid in a body so as to form an elevation; a pile or raised mass: as, a heap of earth or stones. In some places a heap of limestone was formerly 4¾ cubic yards.
- A great number of things; a large accumulation, stock, or store of any kind; a large quantity; a great deal: as, a heap of money; the frost destroyed a heap of fruit.
- A great number of persons or animals; a troop; a crowd; a multitude.
- A crowd; a throng; a multitude or great number of persons.
- An old or run-down car.
- A great deal; a lot.
- A group of things placed or thrown, one on top of the other.
- A great number or large quantity of things not placed in a pile.
- A pile or mass; a collection of things laid in a body, or thrown together so as to form an elevation.
- A data structure consisting of trees in which each node is greater than all its children.
- (often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent
- A car that is old and unreliable
- A collection of objects laid on top of each other
- In mathematics, a collection of objects all related in the same way one to another.
PILE vs HEAP: VERB
- Press tightly together or cram
- Arrange in stacks
- Place or lay as if in a pile
- Arrange in stacks
- Fill to overflow
- Bestow in large quantities
- To pile in a heap.
- To supply in great quantity.
PILE vs HEAP: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To form a heap or pile.
- To add or increase to abundance or to a point of burdensomeness.
- To load (something) with a heap or pile.
- To place or lay in a pile or heap.
- To move in, out, or forward in a disorderly mass or group.
- N/A
PILE vs HEAP: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To drive piles into.
- To support with piles.
- To form or round into a heap, as in measuring; to fill (a measure) more than even full.
- To throw or lay in a heap; to make a heap of; to pile; ; -- often with up; ; or with on.
- To collect in great quantity; to amass; to lay up; to accumulate; -- usually with up.
- To bestow in abundance or lavishly.
- To put or throw in a pile.
- To fill completely or to overflowing.
PILE vs HEAP: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To furnish with a pile or head.
- To furnish, strengthen, or support with piles; drive piles into.
- To lay or throw into a heap; heap, or heap up; collect into a pile or mass: as, to pile wood or stones.
- To furnish with pile; make shaggy.
- To break off the awns of (threshed barley).
- A Middle English form of pill.
- Same as fagot, 2
- To bring into an aggregate; accumulate: as, to pile quotations or comments.
- To bestow a heap or large quantity upon.
- To round or form into a heap, as in measuring; give or fill with overflowing measure.
- To cast, lay, or gather in a heap; pile; accumulate; amass: as, to heap stones or ore: often with up or on: as, to heap up treasures; to heap on wood or coal.
PILE vs HEAP: RELATED WORDS
- Spile, Mound, Spate, Throng, Plenty, Pot, Hatful, Slew, Lot, Raft, Pack, Wad, Mess, Stack, Heap
- Muckle, Spate, Batch, Whole lot, Mound, Raft, Jalopy, Slew, Plenty, Wad, Hatful, Lot, Mess, Stack, Pile
PILE vs HEAP: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Whole lot, Batch, Spile, Mound, Throng, Plenty, Pot, Hatful, Slew, Lot, Pack, Wad, Mess, Stack, Heap
- Tidy sum, Flock, Mass, Muckle, Batch, Whole lot, Mound, Slew, Plenty, Wad, Hatful, Lot, Mess, Stack, Pile
PILE vs HEAP: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The top card of the draw pile is turned and placed next to it in a discard pile.
- Taking samples of reject pile to construction outfits to see if anyone is interested in purchasing the pile.
- For wood pile cushions, it is recommended that a new, dry cushion be used for each pile.
- Reshuffle the Power Pack and Dead Pile into the Draw Pile.
- Move an entire pile onto another pile, if the move creates a valid sequence.
- You had the freedom to cut a big pile or a little pile.
- This information can be used as another quality control the process of pile driving and verifying pile design.
- Take the King of Spades from its pile, turn it face down, and start a new pile.
- Have students sort the cards into a fact pile and an opinion pile.
- Department: a hydraulic pile pushing system, a vibratory pile driver; a hydraulic impact pile driver; a drop hammer, a diesel impact pile driver.
- Typically, access violations occurring in the heap manager are good indicators that a heap corruption has occurred.
- These tools include allocation timelines, sampling heap profiler, and heap snapshots, just to name a few.
- Heap and When object dies or garbage collected, memory goes back to Heap space in Java.
- HEAP Fact Sheet: Click HERE To apply for HEAP assistance, please file an application online: www.
- Generally, heap leach mining operations involve ongoing interaction between excavation and heap operation.
- HEAP benefit payment amount are not eligible for the HEAP Cooling Assistance Program.
- Since so many Heap customers use Redshift, we built Heap SQL to allow them to sync their Heap datasets to their own Redshift clusters.
- Heap Sort Heap sort is a comparison based sorting technique based on Binary Heap data structure.
- If you have gotten HEAP, the HEAP office is closed, or have been denied HEAP, you should then apply for emergency assistance.
- Binomoial Heap and Fibonacci Heap are variations of Binary Heap.
PILE vs HEAP: QUESTIONS
- Which carpeting material is best for low pile carpets?
- What are the key factors in pile foundations design?
- When to design ground beams for allowable pile eccentricity?
- Can PLAXIS-GID model complicated tunnel-pile interaction problems?
- What are the major issues faced during pile construction?
- When to calculate the pile foundation of a building?
- What causes sentinel pile and non-posterior midline?
- Quels sont les ordinateurs qui sollicitent la pile?
- What size pile can the Taets pile breaker be used for?
- What are the achievable tolerances for pile pile work?
- Is it possible to implement binomial heap in Haskell?
- What happens if heap verification is enabled on UAFS?
- What does the detail message Java heap space indicates?
- Can VueScan Rescue my ScanSnap from the trash heap?
- How to resolve native heap OutOfMemoryError in Java?
- Which NSS versions are vulnerable to heap overflow?
- Does Symantec Endpoint Protection detect heap spray attacks?
- Why does Symantec Endpoint Protection block heap spray?
- What is the snmpnetstat heap overflow vulnerability?
- Why is there no evidence that a heap is not a heap?