noun, verb, panned, pan⋅ning.| 1. | a broad, shallow container of metal, usually having sides flaring outward toward the top, used in various forms for frying, baking, washing, etc. |
| 2. | any similar receptacle or part, as the scales of a balance. |
| 3. | the amount a pan holds or can hold; panful: a pan of shelled peas. |
| 4. | any of various open or closed containers used in industrial or mechanical processes. |
| 5. | a container in which silver ores are ground and amalgamated. |
| 6. | a container in which gold or other heavy, valuable metals are separated from gravel or other substances by agitation with water. |
| 7. | a drifting piece of flat, thin ice, as formed on a shore or bay. |
| 8. | a natural depression in the ground, as one containing water, mud, or mineral salts. |
| 9. | a similar depression made artificially, as for evaporating salt water to make salt. |
| 10. | (in old guns) the depressed part of the lock, holding the priming. |
| 11. | Also, panning. an unfavorable review, critique, or appraisal: The show got one rave and three pans. |
| 12. | Slang. the face. |
| 13. | Informal. to criticize severely, as in a review of a play. |
| 14. | to wash (gravel, sand, etc.) in a pan to separate gold or other heavy valuable metal. |
| 15. | to cook (oysters, clams, etc.) in a pan. |
| 16. | to wash gravel, sand, etc., in a pan in seeking gold or the like. |
| 17. | to yield gold or the like, as gravel washed in a pan. |
| 18. | pan out, Informal. to turn out, esp. successfully: The couple's reconciliation just didn't pan out. |

The Greek god of flocks, forests, meadows, and shepherds. He had the horns and feet of a goat. Pan frolicked about the landscape, playing delightful tunes.
Note: Pan's musical instrument was a set of reed pipes, the “pipes of Pan.”
Note: According to legend, Pan was the source of scary noises in the wilderness at night. Fright at these noises was called “panic.”
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Turn out well, succeed, as in If I don't pan out as a musician, I can always go back to school. This expression alludes to washing gold from gravel in a pan. [Mid-1800s]