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The phrase "reverse the curse" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is often used in situations where a negative or undesirable situation or outcome needs to be changed or undone. Example: After years of defeat, the team finally found a way to reverse the curse and win the championship.
Exact(20)
It arrived in a limousine and wore a sign reading "Reverse the Curse".
Now the sign says "Reverse the Curse," the battle cry of a region starved for a championship.
Hughes, 21, grew up rooting for the Red Sox and had a Nomar Garciaparra poster with the slogan "Reverse the Curse" in his bedroom.
Michael Gibbons, the executive director of the Babe Ruth Birthplace and Museum in Baltimore, said fans are being creative in trying to reverse the "Curse of the Bambino".
Officials have tracked down the witchdoctor and ordered him to reverse the curse or face prosecution as an accomplice to the child trafficking ring.
Now that the Babe's team has been beaten, Boston can try to reverse The Curse, win the Series for the first time since 1918 and bring happiness to the Hub which can scarcely believe the tumultuous turn of events.
Similar(40)
As Nwankwo Kanu poked in the only goal of a thrilling contest, Portsmouth reversed the curse of many decades.
Reversing the curse requires McKnight's full-figured Kristine Kringle – a role he played in the Tron's 2014 panto Miracle on 34 Parnie Street – and Julie Wilson Nimmo's touchingly earnest Olive to go on a quest for magical talismans.
In March 2005, Houghton Mifflin Company published Reversing the Curse, a book by Shaughnessy, author of the bestselling The Curse of the Bambino, chronicling the 2004 Red Sox season.
It had held a contest in which "ultimate Yankee fans" competed for a chance to visit the Babe's grave and ask him to "reverse the reverse curse" against the Yankees (which, in plain English, would translate as "restore the curse against the Boston Red Sox").
Joe Posnanski tries to explain on SI.com just how cursed the Cubs are, and Rick Telander of The Chicago Sun-Times writes that sure, Epstein helped reverse the Red Sox curse, but "the Red Sox are not Cubs Lite".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com