释义 |
pile in verb to enter en masse, especially a vehicle or a bar US, 1841- Once in a while, when business was slow at the Martinique, I would knock off early and Bix and I would pile into a cab, bound for the South Side in Chicago[.] — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 82, 1946
- And there we’d be pilin’ into Effin Nellie’s or Peg-leg Pete’s, for a couple of pints of good beer, maybe the first in the week[.] — Alan Bleasdale, Boys From the Blackstuff, 1982
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