Curve
To reject someone romantically
He tried to flirt all night, but she curved him the second he asked for her number.
A friend shows you a screenshot where someone flirted hard in their DMs, and they replied with a dry one-word message to shut it down.
Literally to bend something away from a straight path, like curving a ball or turning away.
In practice it means rejecting someone's romantic or flirty attempt, often in a casual or dismissive way. You can "curve" a person directly ("I curved him") or "curve" their move ("she curved his DM"). It implies the other person shot their shot and you swerved it. You'll hear it a lot in texting/DM culture where ignoring or short replies are a common way to curve someone.
"Curve" does not mean to change the subject suddenly, to improve after a slow start, to cheat. It specifically means "To reject someone romantically".
Why Learn English expressions that make you sound native?
🎯 Why Learn English Expressions and Idioms
You can study English grammar for years, ace vocabulary tests, and still sound awkward in real conversations. The difference between textbook English and native fluency isn't grammar rules — it's expressions. Native English speakers communicate through idioms, phrasal verbs, and fixed expressions that have meanings far beyond their literal words. If you've ever heard 'break a leg', 'beat around the bush', or 'the ball is in your court' and needed a moment to process, this course fills that gap. Real English fluency means understanding not just words, but the expressions that carry cultural meaning and natural flow.
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This course is perfect for intermediate English learners (A2-B1 level) who have solid grammar foundations but want to sound more natural, international professionals working in English-speaking environments who need to understand workplace idioms, students preparing for immersion in English-speaking countries, and English learners frustrated by the gap between their textbook knowledge and real conversations. You should be comfortable with basic English conversation and ready to expand your expressive range with authentic native expressions.
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Master dozens of essential English expressions used daily by native speakers. Learn classic idioms like 'bite the bullet' (face a difficult situation), 'spill the beans' (reveal a secret), 'under the weather' (feeling ill), and 'once in a blue moon' (very rarely). Understand common phrasal verbs like 'figure out', 'catch up', 'put up with', and 'come across'. Discover conversational expressions like 'you bet', 'no kidding', 'that makes sense', and 'I can't complain'. Each expression includes detailed explanations of both literal and figurative meanings, usage contexts, formality levels, and common mistakes to avoid.