front burner
Plural
front burners
1
a state of high priority where something is dealt with immediately or given the most attention
The idiom "front burner" comes from cooking, where a stove has multiple burners. The front burners are used for pots and pans that need immediate attention because they are more easily accessible and typically deal with the most urgent cooking tasks. In contrast to the back burners, which hold food that can simmer or be delayed, the front burner is associated with high priority. Metaphorically, the term "front burner" was adopted in the 20th century to describe issues, tasks, or concerns that require immediate focus and priority, similar to how the front burners are used for things that need constant monitoring.
- The new project is now on the front burner after the meeting.
- We need to move this task to the front burner before the deadline.
- The proposal is now on the front burner due to recent changes.
- The safety issue has been moved to the front burner after the incident.
- The marketing strategy is on the front burner for the upcoming campaign.