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incuriosity

/in-kyoor-ee-uhs/US // ɪnˈkyʊər i əs //UK // (ɪnˈkjʊərɪəs) //

好奇心,好奇心强,好奇心强的人,好奇

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : not curious; not inquisitive or observant; inattentive; indifferent.
    • : Archaic. lacking care or attention; careless; negligent.
    • : Archaic. deficient in interest or novelty.

Synonyms & Antonyms

nounapathy

Examples

  • Raised on false welfare-queen stereotypes and bootstrapper self-reliance platitudes that have never solved anyone’s actual problems‚ we as a culture can be maddeningly incurious about lives like Alex’s.

  • The former boogeyman of the American left, once viewed as rash, incurious and overly trusting of his gut, has been eclipsed by an even more absurd, menacing figure.

  • Ingraham pitched this as an “embarrassing admission,” as if the FDA were completely incurious about the treatment.

  • A book that is supposed to bridge the gap in our understanding of Iran and America seems incurious about both nations’ official records.

  • He was always affable but ultimately unknowable; intellectually incurious but ferociously ambitious.

  • Doing so, he highlighted the degree to which creationism is a decidedly incurious, insular worldview.

  • The Guardian published most of them in 2009, and yet Murdoch remained utterly incurious until June 2011.

  • Sara Lee sewed more than one rent for him, those days, but she was strangely incurious.

  • The boys left the room in silence, with the incurious obedience of well-trained children.

  • She was a strange vessel, sailing in from beyond their ken, and her pilot was almost as novel, yet they were incurious.

  • Incurious and self-centered, the affairs of the outer world had for her but little real interest.

  • Now, there never was another place habitually so incurious as Thursday Island in its social dealings.