milk it/something dry, to

milk it/something dry, to

To drain something completely, to exhaust all the possibilities of something. The verb to milk, meaning to obtain milk from a cow, was in the early sixteenth century transferred to getting money from someone. In subsequent centuries it was expanded to stealing messages from a telephone or telegraph wire, obtaining maximum audience laughter or applause, and similar unrelated endeavors. Today it appears in such locutions as, “His thesis on Wordsworth’s mentions of flowers milks the subject dry.”
See also: milk, something
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • add in
  • cry over spilled milk
  • cry over spilt milk
  • don't cry over spilled milk
  • add into
  • add (something) into (something)
  • out of (something)
  • a fine how do you do
  • fine how do you do
  • sail through