get one's feet wet, to

get one's feet wet

Fig. to get a little first-time experience with something. (Obvious literal possibilities.) Of course he can't do the job right. He's hardly got his feet wet yet. I'm looking forward to learning to drive. I can't wait to get behind the steering wheel and get my feet wet.
See also: feet, get, wet
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

get one's feet wet

Embark on a new venture, start into new territory. For example, I've only had a few cello lessons-I've barely gotten my feet wet. This expression alludes to the timid swimmer slowly getting into the water. [Late 1500s]
See also: feet, get, wet
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

get (one's) feet wet

To start a new activity or job.
See also: feet, get, wet
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

get one's feet wet, to

To venture into new territory. The allusion here is to the timid swimmer who is wary of getting into the water at all. Although this particular expression dates only from the early twentieth century, a similar idea was expressed more than four hundred years earlier by John Lyly in Euphues and his England (1580): “I resemble those that hauing once wet their feete, care not hoe deepe they wade”; in other words, once having gotten up one’s nerve to try something new, one is more willing to plunge in all the way. In The Glorious Fault (1960) Leonard Mosley combined two metaphors: “In parliamentary life, he [Curzon] was to be one who stayed to get his feet wet before deciding that a ship was sinking.”
See also: feet, get
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • bottom of it, at the/get to the
  • give (one) the fig
  • shed light on, to
  • palm off, to
  • save for a rainy day, to
  • go to one's head, to
  • keep an eye on, to
  • cross paths
  • get one's teeth into (something), to
  • take by storm, to