Verb
pile in (third-person singular simple present piles in, present participle piling in, simple past and past participle piled in)
(informal) To enter or move into a location or a vehicle in large numbers.
And in the colder months, we would take a different trip — north to, Kirkwood, N.Y., Marty’s where the drinking age was 18. We would pile in the car and head up to get a table at Marty’s and we would see just about everybody we knew from Wilkes-Barre. Source: Internet
A for sale sign is seen next to a debris pile in the Arbor Oaks neighborhood on Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2017, in Houston. Source: Internet
Women with wheelbarrow filling up compost pile in yard. Source: Internet
“We harvested 11,000 pounds of onions,” Pilger said, as he picked one off a pile in a greenhouse. Source: Internet
He made another branch pile in the same spot as the previous ones. Source: Internet
It is clear from all the above statistics that Derry is dwindling at the bottom of the economic pile in Northern Ireland. Source: Internet