steal someone's thunder



steal someone's thunder

Use or appropriate another's idea, especially to one's advantage, as in It was Harold's idea but they stole his thunder and turned it into a massive advertising campaign without giving him credit . This idiom comes from an actual incident in which playwright and critic John Dennis (1657-1734) devised a "thunder machine" (by rattling a sheet of tin backstage) for his play, Appius and Virginia (1709), and a few days later discovered the same device being used in a performance of Macbeth, whereupon he declared, "They steal my thunder."
See also: steal, thunder

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Augustynaow-guws-TIN-ahPolish (Rare)
ÅGe-Norwegian
Manuelamah-noo-E-lah (German), mah-NWE-lah (Italian)Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, German, Italian
Suraj-Indian, Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali, Nepali
Frances['frɑ:nsis]
Nataszanah-TAH-shahPolish