See also: pile-on

English

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

  • Audio (AU):(file)

Verb

pile on (third-person singular simple present piles on, present participle piling on, simple past and past participle piled on)

  1. (transitive) To jump on top of someone or something quickly.
    • 2006, Steven M. Hallock, Editorial and Opinion: The Dwindling Marketplace of Ideas in Today's News, Praeger, →ISBN, page 69:
      As football linebackers pile on a quarterback in a blitz, the newspaper editorialist heaped sarcasm onto the president.
    • 2009, Human Kinetics with Thomas Hanlon, The Sports Rules Book - 3rd Edition, Human Kinetics, →ISBN, page 116:
      Piling on: Players may not pile on a runner after the ball is dead or intentionally fall upon any prostrate player.
    • 2011, Michael Harston, The Show: The Michael Thomas Story, Xlibris, →ISBN, page 21:
      The quarterback turns and hands the ball to his fullback just as Sumo hits him in the backfield causing a fumble. Ball loose, ball loose screamed Jones. There is a mad scramble for the loose ball as bodies pile on top of each other.
  2. (transitive, figurative) To criticize someone or something in a concerted effort.
    • 2015 May 20, Luke Holland, “Piling on Nickelback is old hat. Can't we all just move on already?”, in The Guardian[1]:
      Piling on Nickelback is old hat. Can't we all just move on already? Chad Kroeger and his band are still the group everyone loves to hate, but after the Queensland police put out a wanted poster for them for ‘crimes against music’ Luke Holland asks: has the hating gone too far?
    • 2020 December 31, Alexis Carey, “'Worst ever': Melania Trump's legacy brutally mocked”, in NZ Herald[2]:
      The hashtag #WorstFlotusEver has started to take off on Twitter, with critics piling on the former model by listing their many grievances and mocking her achievements over the past four years.

Noun

pile on (plural pile ons)

  1. An argument or fight in which one side is greatly advantaged by being more numerous or more closely allied than the other side.
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    • 2020 December 6, Marie O'Halloran, “Social media ‘pile on’ against Sinn Féin critics does not aid party, Ó Broin says”, in The Irish Times[3]:
      A social media “pile-on” against anyone who criticises Sinn Féin does not aid or assist the party, its housing spokesman has said.
    • 2021 February 2, Katharine Murphy, The Guardian[4]:
      Muzzling Kelly also elevates a semi-professional obscurantist to the status of free speech martyr, and that invites a cacophonous pile-on from the rightwing bobble heads who screech about the left’s obsession with identity politics while shovelling identity politics at their audiences.

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