From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishpour something into something phrasal verbif people pour money into something, they provide a lot of money for it over a period of time, in order to make it successful They’ve poured thousands of pounds into developing the business. → pour→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
pour into • Then open a chilled bottle of Guinness Original and pour it slowly into a glass.• Whatever the business at hand was, he got on with it, rather as if you poured Draino into a sink.• The government often overreacts to newly discovered dangers and pours disproportionate resources into hastily conceived remedies.• By the end of 1995 foreign money was pouring back into most of the countries it had hastily fled.• Farmers who add the chemicals to animal feed pour yet more into the environment.• Despite their good fortune, the locals resented all the refugees pouring and crowding into their space.• The fiery storm of shot and shell poured destruction into these ranks, but there was no halt..• Investors seeking safety poured their money into U.