English language

How to pronounce stile in English?

Toggle Transcript
Type Words
Type of upright, vertical

Examples of stile

stile
Pass over a stile and on through the wood with a stream to your right-hand side.
From the telegraph.co.uk
At the road junction, go straight across over the stile and slightly R in field.
From the halesowennews.co.uk
Continue beside the grounds, leaving the field by stile after an estate cottage.
From the gazetteherald.co.uk
Climb the opposite bank and stile to continue along the left edge for 400 yards.
From the theargus.co.uk
The path soon crosses a field bridge, climbing quarter-left, to a skyline stile.
From the theargus.co.uk
Go along the driveway and veer off left of a barn and over a stile on the left.
From the theargus.co.uk
Turn left and, just before reaching a five-bar gate, turn right and over a stile.
From the theargus.co.uk
Continue uphill with a wood and ponds on the right to the top and over a stile.
From the theargus.co.uk
He knew he was within five steps of the stile leading into Widow Douglas'grounds.
From the sacbee.com
More examples
  • An upright that is a member in a door or window frame
  • A stile is a structure which provides people a passage through or over a fence or boundary via steps, ladders, or narrow gaps. Stiles are often built in rural areas or along footpaths to allow access to an adjacent field or area separated by a fence, wall or hedge. ...
  • Frame and panel construction (also called "rail and stile") is a woodworking technique often used in the making of doors, wainscoting, and other decorative features for cabinets, furniture, and homes. ...
  • A set of steps surmounting a fence or wall, or a narrow gate or contrived passage through a fence or wall, which in either case allows people but not livestock to pass; A vertical component of a panel or frame, such as that of a door or window
  • (Stiles) The sides of the sash.
  • (Stiles) the structural right and left vertical parts of a shutter panel.
  • (Stiles) The vertical side members of framed and paneled doors.
  • (Stiles) The vertical parts of a framework, a term usually associated with early furniture.
  • (Stiles) The two outer vertical wood pieces of a door panel.