Love English in curiously bland style associated with Wodehouse? (3,4)
I believe the answer is:
old bean
'style associated with wodehouse?' is the definition.
I don't know anything about this answer so I cannot judge whether this works.
'love english in curiously bland' is the wordplay.
'love' becomes 'o' (In tennis, 'love' means 'zero').
'english' becomes 'e' (abbreviation).
'in' indicates putting letters inside.
'curiously' is an anagram indicator.
'bland' anagrammed gives 'ldban'.
'e' put into 'ldban' is 'ldbean'.
'o'+'ldbean'='OLD BEAN'
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for old bean that I've seen before include "Familiar address to chap" , "Good friend" , "dated friend" , "My dear chap!" , "Who Wooster might have addressed" .)