prime the pump
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]As an idiomatic term, from the 1930s. From the metaphor of filling (priming) a liquid pump in order to prepare it for operation.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (Mid-Atlantic US): (file)
Verb
[edit]prime the pump (third-person singular simple present primes the pump, present participle priming the pump, simple past and past participle primed the pump)
- (economics) To engage in deficit spending [from 1930s].
- 1935, Congressional Record, page 4087:
- […] by supplying, through the Federal Treasury, a sufficient flow of finance and currency that will prime the pump and keep it going until it can start its flow from the well or fountain of national resources.
- To give something in order to create the conditions where others will give in return.
- 2001, Asa E. Lennon, The Forgotten Self: A Book of Reminders, →ISBN, page 112:
- For example, if you give money to a charity, as a tax reduction or to prime the pump for more money to flow to you, than the actual intent is not making someone else happy, but yourself.
- 2002, Dana Stabenow, A Fine and Bitter Snow, →ISBN, page 180:
- Kate primed the pump by telling the story of Dina teaching her to rappel.
- 2011, Dennis Merritt Jones, The Art of Uncertainty: How to Live in the Mystery of Life and Love It, →ISBN:
- A good way to prime the pump of generosity is by starting with the intangibles such as a smile, or a simple courtesy such as opening a door for someone or extending some other random act of kindness.
- 2012 -, Poppy Smith, Why Can't He Think More Like Me?, →ISBN:
- If you're starving for some admiring comments, you might have to prime the pump.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see prime, the, pump.