Pile is a noun for a quantity of items stacked or thrown one on top of the other; a large accumulation or quantity; a large quantity of money. Example:
There was a huge pile of clothes on my bed.
Pile is a verb that means to lay or place a quantity one on top of the other; to load or to accumulate. Example:
We can pile as many books in the car as will fit.
How to use the word in a sentence.
The dress she was wearing at the party was absolutely exquisite!
Yes, in sentence such as'I want to go to the hospital'
An interim means an interval. There was a brief interim in the meeting while everyone got organized.
The superlative degree of word sincere can be most sincere ,or sincerest according to its use in the sentence.
the frog sprung out of the pile of leaves
The pile of papers in David's box was immense.
There's one more beet on the pile.
The pile of corpses left by the serial killer was a gruesome sight.
He piled his books on the desk before heading out.
Sure! I had to rummage through my bag to find my keys this morning.
The story he told us was a load of rubbish. There was a pile of rubbish in the corner.
Pile the manure in heaps over there. When I was MUCH younger, I used heaps of sugar in my tea.
"Yeah, just throw that in the pile with the others" You should rake the leaves into a pile before burning them.I have a pile of dirty laundry to wash.
(Amass - to heap together, pile up)"By working hard and spending little, he managed to amass a fortune."
"That pile over there is just junk"
The building was demolished and reduced to a pile of rubble.