Piler vs Piles - What's the difference?
piler | piles |
One who piles something
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=May 10, author=Penelope Green, title=Order and Chaos in a Single Heartbeat, work=New York Times
, passage=Houses and photography sets seem to work better, he said, if “I exert a system of precision.” Ms. Ford, 33, said she is by nature a piler and stacker but has learned to follow what she described good-naturedly as “the Charlie Code.” }}
(pathology) Haemorrhoids.
(informal, piles of) A large amount of.
As a noun piler
is one who piles something.As a verb piles is
.piler
English
Noun
(en noun)citation
Anagrams
* * * English agent nouns ----piles
English
Noun
(head) plural- Piles were sunk into the river to support the bridge.
- Many women get piles when pregnant.
- He must earn piles of money.