phrase
Latin

Quid Pro Quo

lit. “something for something”

An exchange of favors or value.

Origin

Originally a pharmacist's phrase for substituting one ingredient for another. Migrated to legal use ('consideration' in contracts) and then to general talk about trade-offs, especially political ones.

Modern usage

Often neutral (contracts, negotiations) but increasingly heard in scandals — 'a quid pro quo arrangement' implies improper exchange.

Tags

exchange
negotiation

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