quick on the draw/trigger

quick on the draw/trigger

Fast to act or react. The term comes from the gunslingers of the American West and was transferred to other kinds of quick reaction in the first half of the twentieth century. The literal meaning of quick on the trigger is a century older, appearing in a letter of 1808: “I trust that all your Aids will be quick on the trigger” (M. L. Weems, in E. E. F. Skeel, M. L. Weems: Works and Ways).
See also: draw, on, quick, trigger
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • be quick off the mark
  • be quick/slow off the mark
  • quick off the mark
  • flip (one's) lid
  • flip lid
  • flip one’s lid
  • flip one's lid
  • flip your lid
  • get a rise out of (one)
  • get a rise out of somebody