Posts Tagged ‘flash in the pan’

What exactly is a “flash in the pan”?

October 10, 2011

Many pundits are calling Herman Cain a “flash in the pan”.

I thought it simply meant “here today, gone tomorrow” … but got curious.

Here’s a more official reading from Phrases.org

Flash in the pan: Something which disappoints by failing to deliver anything of value, despite a showy beginning.

The origin …

One notion is that this phrase derives from the Californian Gold Rush of the mid 19th century.

Prospectors who panned for gold supposedly became excited when they saw something glint in the pan, only to have their hopes dashed when it proved not to be gold but a mere ‘flash in the pan’.

This is an attractive and plausible notion, in part because it ties in with another phrase related to disappointment – ‘it didn’t pan out’.

Nevertheless, gold prospecting isn’t the origin of ‘a flash in the pan’.

The phrase did have a literal meaning, i.e. it derives from a real flash in a real pan, but not a prospector’s pan, a musket’s pan.

Flintlock muskets used to have small pans to hold charges of gunpowder.

An attempt to fire a musket in which the gunpowder flared up without a bullet being fired was a ‘flash in the pan’.

Now we know …

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