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"swerve from" is a correct phrase in written English.
It is used to mean "deviate from," as in "He always swerves from his daily routine."
Exact(58)
That in itself is a swerve from the past.
On Iran, Mr. Bush did not swerve from earlier pronouncements.
Ms. Wilson does swerve from biography, however, in the plot.
They swerve from antic to solemn, from invention to confessional.
They swerve from their tree perches, peck, and fly back to bare branches.
Why does Toklas swerve from the hortatory to the passive in mid-sentence?
And their basic methods do not swerve from one administration to the next.
There is no battle now, no need to swerve from defensiveness to attack.
As they do so they "swerve" from a direct course, and may strike against each other.
Similar(2)
A knockout side-swerve from Britain's best band.
And he never swerved from that path.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com