pigeonhole \PIJ-uhn-hohl\,
verb:
1. To lay aside for use or reference at some later, indefinite time.
noun:
1. One of a series of small, open compartments, as in a desk,cabinet, or the like, used for filing or sorting papers, letters,etc.
2. In printing, white space created by setting words or lines too far apart.
“Mobility’s hard in Spain; people pigeonhole you for life in the box where they think you belong.”
-- Enrique Vila-Mata, "Dublinesque"
Even his staunchest supporters didn't know where to pigeonhole him politically.
-- Bruce Duffy, "The World As I Found It"
Pigeonhole begins with the sense of a literal nesting place for the bird, then finds figurative usage in printing. The first use as a verb is recorded in 1854.
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