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Beat around the bush

To avoid talking directly about the main topic

EN
Example

Can you stop beating around the bush and just tell me if you're quitting?

When to use it

You're in a meeting and someone keeps giving long background stories instead of answering the question.

What it means

Literally it suggests hitting the bushes instead of going straight for the target.
In practice it means avoiding the main point-talking indirectly, using hints, or dragging out the conversation. It often implies you're being polite, nervous, or manipulative. People usually say it when they want someone to be blunt and get to the point.

Don't confuse it with

"Beat around the bush" does not mean explain something in a simple way, speak too honestly without tact, change the topic to something fun. It specifically means "To avoid talking directly about the main topic".

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