What does to backburner something mean?

When you backburner something, you make it a lower priority. It comes from the idiom “put something on the back burner.” 

 

This comes from the world of food and cooking, where the easy, low-priority pots and pans are put on the burners at the back of the stove, where they don’t need or receive much attention.

You can always find different ways of expressing your meaning by using the QuillBot Paraphrasing Tool. It’s quick, easy, and free!

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Is it brass tacks or brass tax?

The correct spelling of the idiom is brass tacks. Nobody really knows the origin of the phrase, but it means doing away with unnecessary things and focusing on the essentials.

It can be used in a variety of ways, including:

  • The prime minister promised a return to brass tacks politics, focusing on the economy.
  • “Let’s get down to brass tacks,” the coach said. “We need to score more points than the opposition.”
  • Some staff welcomed the new brass tacks approach, while others saw it as nothing more than a gimmick.

To make sure you use this idiom correctly in your writing, try QuillBot’s Grammar Checker.

Continue reading: Is it brass tacks or brass tax?