Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Pine is not a man to easily pigeon-hole musically.
www.telegraph.co.uk
Yeh is a difficult animal to intellectually pigeon-hole and has often steered his own path.
en.wikipedia.org
We live in a world that loves to categorise and pigeon-hole.
www.independent.co.uk
He believes that the band can not be pigeon-holed into one genre but was able to experiment musically.
en.wikipedia.org
Over the years, many tried to stereotype and pigeon-hole my father.
www.abc.net.au
In terms of genre the game doesn't sit neatly in any particular pigeon-hole but it's essentially an interactive story, somewhere between a visual novel and a traditional role-player.
metro.co.uk
It then had this extraordinary life, and people started seeing me in a different pigeon-hole.
www.independent.ie
He is not your run-of-the-mill person whose ethnic nuances you can easily pigeon-hole through your own prism and evaluation.
thenationonlineng.net
Documents and messages are placed in a person's pigeon-hole for them to collect; they can reply by putting a response inside the sender's pigeon-hole.
en.wikipedia.org
And, even when the argument was won over hiring a work force that represented the population, myopic editors would often pigeon-hole non-white producers and presenters.
en.wikipedia.org

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