irons in the fire

English

Etymology

Describing a blacksmith working on several pieces at the same time.

Pronunciation

  • Audio (General Australian):(file)

Noun

irons in the fire pl (plural only)

  1. Tasks in progress; involvement in ongoing projects.
    • 2024 January 24, Dyan Perry talks to Nick Brodrick, “The industry has given me so much”, in RAIL, number 1001, page 45:
      Although she plans to step back from the boards of NSAR and East West Rail, there are "a couple of other irons in the fire".
    • 2025 May 11, Monica Padrick, “Don Tyxote” (3:18 from the start), in Krapopolis[1], season 2, episode 21, spoken by Hippocampus (Duncan Trussell):
      “Hippo, what are you working on? I've noticed you haven't debuted anything in a while, so it must be pretty good.” “What? Wh-why would I tell you that? I don't answer to you. I have a lot of irons in the fire. In fact, I should check on 'em. I'm checking on my irons!”

Usage notes

May be used with a positive connotation, e.g. "have other irons in the fire" (other projects are available if this one fails), or with a negative connotation, e.g. "too many irons in the fire" (overwhelmed by having too many tasks).

Translations

See also