0 past simple and past participle of shoehorn --
1 to fit something tightly in a particular place, often between two other things: --
This tiny restaurant is shoehorned between two major banks.
Shoehorned prophecies usually take vague prophecies and twist them to mean the event in question even if the evidence for the connection is shaky.
But the ferns in the loose sense are much too diverse a group to be shoehorned into one taxon at such a low rank.
But sadly, he offers nothing new and nothing remarkable, and the plot is thin with complications literally shoehorned in.
This produced a number of other visual artifacts; new streets and neighborhoods had to be shoehorned into layouts designed around previously existing features.
He also praised the lyric as a tried-but-true drinkin and cryin lyric for something that manages to sound modern without feeling uncomfortably shoehorned in there.
The premise is shoehorned into working rather than organically feeling like the right thing to do.
But some of us are not, and more and more are refusing to be shoehorned into monogamy.
The inclusion of police as best value authorities, inappropriately shoehorned into a structure that is essentially designed for local government, will reinforce many of the problems.