PILE, PILING
NOUNS
1616 — RICK a pile → Eng. dial.
1625 — DECK a pile of things laid flat upon each other → obs.
1659 — AGGESTION a heaping or piling up → obs.
1659 — CUMULUS a heap, a pile; an accumulation, a gathering; the conical top of a heaped measure
1785 — RICKLE a loose heap or pile; a stack→ Sc. & Eng. dial.
1823 — TAPPIETOURIE — TAPPY-TOURIE a high pile or heap; a cairn of stones on a hilltop → Sc.
1860 — BING a heap, a pile; also, a crowd → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1904 — REEK a pile, a heap, esp. of snow; a drift → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1955 — PIG PILE a pile of people one on top of another → Amer. dial.
VERBS
1534 — CUMULATE to gather in a heap; to heap up; to pile up, to collect, to amass, to accumulate
1641 — DESS to pile up in orderly fashion layer after layer; to arrange neatly; to lay things close together → Eng. dial.
1655 — AGGEST to pile up or together in heaps; to heap up → obs.
1804 — BING to pile in a heap; to accumulate → Sc. & N. Ireland
1844 — CAIRNEY to pile (up) → Sc.
1896 — RICKLE to gather into a loose heap; to pile up loose matter → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1898 — BINKER to pile up in a heap → Sc. (Bk.)
1904 — REEK to heap or pile up → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1929 — PANG to pile up, to make into a heap → Sc.
1970 — BED to stack; to put in a pile → Amer. dial.