The idioms "make a pile" or "make a bundle" both mean the same and that is
"make lots of money" (I.e. a pile or bundle of stashes/wods of cash).
Made a pile means the person has made allot of money (i.e. a pile of money).
In the noun phrase 'a pile of newspapers', the noun 'pile' is functioning as a collective noun for the 'newspapers'.
The French phrase, "Faire des tonnes" translates into English as "to pile it on" or to "to lay it on thick." The phrase is used when someone is exaggerating something.
It means, "pile." It could mean a pile of wool, a pile driven into the ground, a Voltaic pile (battery), or an atomic pile (nuclear reactor).
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This referred to a meal. Grub is food. It could also refer to the chuckwagon.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant to collect. You can see the image comes from raking something up into a pile or scraping it together.
Fagots are old English for sticks so it is a pile of sticks
Rock?
song made popular by Elvis presley
Yes, the phrase "just as good as a pile of gold" is a metaphor because it suggests that something is as valuable or desirable as a literal pile of gold, conveying the idea of high worth or importance.
A pile cap is a part of a cement or concrete formation. The method statement shows how the pile caps should be made.
"Tibi ibnoscitur" is not a phrase in Latin. It does not have a clear meaning or translation. It might be a misspelling or a made-up phrase.