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Home Education & Technology Word of the Day

WORD OF THE DAY: QUID PRO QUO

Admin by Admin
July 18, 2026
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WORD OF THE DAY: QUID PRO QUO

noun   |   kwid-proh-KWOH

READ ALSO

WORD OF THE DAY: OBDURATE

WORD OF THE DAY: BIBELOT

Quid pro quo refers to something that is given to you or done for you in return for something you have given to or done for someone else.

// If they do us this favour, they’ll expect a quid pro quo.

EXAMPLES OF QUID PRO QUO

“For each proposal, it’s almost guaranteed you’ll have to negotiate with at least one faction, which usually involves some kind of quid pro quo. Maybe you agree to pass a policy they want next, or to advance research on a new technology of their choice.” — Deven McClure, Polygon, 24 Jan. 2026

DID YOU KNOW?

In the 1500s, a quid pro quo was something obtained from an apothecary. That’s because when quid pro quo (New Latin for “something for something”) was first used as a phrase in English it appeared especially in situations where one medicine was substituted for another—whether intentionally (and sometimes fraudulently) or accidentally. The meaning of the phrase was quickly extended, however, and within several decades it was being used for more general equivalent exchanges, and as a noun for the act of substituting, or the substituted thing itself. By the mid-1600s the noun could be used for a bargain made between two parties involving the giving of one thing in return for another, e.g. “I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine.” Although such bargains are not inherently illegal, this sense of quid pro quo often appears today in legal contexts where the giving and taking is less than completely lawful.

Merriam Webster Dictionary

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