pigeonhole
See also: pigeon-hole and pigeon hole
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
pigeon + hole. Originally literal hole for pigeons, later similar compartments for papers, then extended metaphorically in verb sense of narrowly categorizing or deferring.
Pronunciation
Audio (US) (file)
Noun
pigeonhole (plural pigeonholes)
- One of an array of compartments for housing pigeons in a pigeon loft (dovecote).
- (by extension) One of an array of compartments for receiving mail and other messages at a college, office, etc.
- Fred was disappointed to find his pigeonhole empty except for bills and a flyer offering 20% off on manicures.
- One of an array of compartments for storing scrolls at a library.
- A similar compartment in a desk, used for sorting and storing papers.
- (figurative) A category.
Translations
one of an array of compartments for pigeons
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one of an array of compartments for mail
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Verb
pigeonhole (third-person singular simple present pigeonholes, present participle pigeonholing, simple past and past participle pigeonholed)
- To categorize; especially to limit or be limited to a particular category, role, etc.
- Fred was tired of being pigeonholed as a computer geek.
- 1902 October, Jack London, A Daughter of the Snows, Philadelphia, Pa.: J[oshua] B[allinger] Lippincott Company, →OCLC:
- He prided himself on his largeness when he granted that there were three kinds of women […] Not that he pigeon-holed Frona according to his inherited definitions.
- 2000, Eminem (lyrics and music), “The Way I Am”:
- I'm not gonna be able, to top on My Name Is / And pigeonholed into some poppy sensation
- 2023 June 28, Nick Reilly, “Meet eee gee, the singer who refuses to put her music in one box”, in Rolling Stone UK:
- The singer, real name Emma Grankvist, deals in whip-smart lyrics and striking melodies that offer a refreshing perspective on the world around her, all wrapped up in a package that’s brilliantly tough to pigeonhole.
- To put aside, to not act on (proposals, suggestions, advice).
- 1910, Angus Hamilton, Herbert Henry Austin, Masatake Terauchi, Korea: Its History, Its People, and Its Commerce, page 294:
- These laws were not carried into effect: they were pigeon-holed.
- 1917, “The Looking Glass: Election laws in Southern California”, in The Crisis, number 11, page 29:
- […] vociferously declared that they had the evidence. But no one prosecutes. No one swears out a warrant. The evidence is pigeonholed.
- 2008, Edward Sidlow, Beth Henschen, America at Odds, page 251:
- Alternatively, the chairperson may decide to put the bill aside and ignore it. Most bills that are pigeonholed in this manner receive no further action.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
to categorize; especially to limit or be limited to a particular category, role, etc
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to put aside — see put aside
See also
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