pillar

See also: Pillar

English

Beinecke library pillar
Pelham's pillar
Roman pillar ruin

Etymology

From Middle English, borrowed from Old French pilier, from Medieval Latin or Vulgar Latin *pilāre (a pillar), from Latin pila (a pillar, pier, mole).

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /ˈpɪlɚ/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈpɪlə/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪlə(ɹ)
  • Hyphenation: pil‧lar

Noun

pillar (plural pillars)

  1. (architecture) A large post, often used as supporting architecture.
  2. Something resembling such a structure.
    a pillar of smoke
  3. (figuratively) An essential part of something that provides support.
    He's a pillar of the community.
  4. (Roman Catholicism) A portable ornamental column, formerly carried before a cardinal, as emblematic of his support to the church.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Skelton to this entry?)
  5. The centre of the volta, ring, or manege ground, around which a horse turns.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

pillar (third-person singular simple present pillars, present participle pillaring, simple past and past participle pillared)

  1. To provide with pillars or added strength as if from pillars.
    • 1910, James Morgan, Blast furnace practice:
      Insufficient penetration, or faulty distribution of the blast, may give rise to "pillaring" — that is, the formation of a pillar or column of cold material extending up through the middle of the hearth
    • 1996, National Academy of Engineering, First annual Symposium on Frontiers of Engineering, page 25:
      We discovered this new class of compounds in our search for a means of generating porosity by pillaring layered double hydroxides
    • 1998, Functional and smart materials, page 226:
      In the pillaring-grafting reaction the dimensionality increases by pillaring the organic or precursory polynuclear metal hydroxyl cations into an inorganic layer structured matrix.
    • 2004, Scott M. Auerbach; Kathleen A. Carrado, Prabir K. Dutta, Handbook of layered materials, page 261:
      It was then that scientists started to create porosity in the interlayer space of layered clays. developing the first pillared clays with pores in the larger microporous region.

See also

Further reading

Anagrams


Catalan

Pronunciation

  • (Balearic, Central) IPA(key): /piˈʎa/
  • (Valencian) IPA(key): /piˈʎaɾ/
  • Rhymes: -a(ɾ)

Verb

pillar (first-person singular present pillo, past participle pillat)

  1. (transitive) This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.

Conjugation


Portuguese

Noun

pillar m (plural pillares)

  1. Obsolete spelling of pilar

Spanish

Etymology

Probably borrowed from Italian pigliare or French piller. Compare also Portuguese pilhar.

Pronunciation

  • (Castilian) IPA(key): /piˈʎaɾ/
  • (Latin America) IPA(key): /piˈɟ͡ʝaɾ/, [piˈʝaɾ]

Verb

pillar (first-person singular present pillo, first-person singular preterite pillé, past participle pillado)

  1. to catch, get
  2. to pilfer, steal
  3. (colloquial) to get (a joke)
  4. (colloquial) to catch, catch up to
  5. (colloquial) to catch (someone doing something illegal)
  6. (colloquial) to come down with, catch (an illness)
  7. (colloquial, reflexive) to jam (your finger)
    Me pillé el dedo con la puerta ― I jammed my finger in the door.
  8. (colloquial, reflexive) to fall in love, to crush on someone
    Creo que se ha pillado de mí ― I think she may have a crush on me.

Conjugation

    Synonyms

    Derived terms

    See also


    Swedish

    Verb

    pillar

    1. present tense of pilla.
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