[
UK
/ɪnkjˈʊɹɪəs/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
showing absence of intellectual inquisitiveness or natural curiosity
strangely incurious about the cause of the political upheaval surrounding them
How To Use incurious In A Sentence
- And they aren't stupid, just very religious, incurious and unwilling to take the time to research a view that goes against their ideology.
- The terms conservative and liberal have come to signify "not-me" to a polis so intellectually incurious it renders the phrase "Information Age" monumentally tragic. -
- The film is fundamentally incurious about the real, complex lives of the individuals involved and the modern footage, with its cheesy home-video effects, is disappointing to say the least.
- Somewhere within her, responsive notes were answering to the things without, forgotten and undreamed-of correspondences were being renewed; and she was aware of it in an incurious way, and her soul was troubled, but she was not equal to the mental exultation necessary to transmute and understand. LI-WAN, THE FAIR
- My show is an exercise in will - fully ignorant, emotionally based, non intellectual, incurious passion about things.
- She turns round, puzzled but incurious at the noise, as impassive as livestock.
- Tom is, at heart, afraid of the world, suspicious, ego-driven, incurious, and rigid.
- Neither had anything to declare, as they walked, on different afternoons, nonchalantly past the incurious customs officials in the way one might walk down the marriage aisle if all the guests on either side were asleep.
- But his description of an incurious, scripted president is the most interesting.
- Thus a couple of wandering natives, unrecognizable under their dirty stormproof blankets and their scarcely, thinner layers of grease and grime, watched impassively, incuriously, while a box floated pendant from its parachute from sky to ground. First Lensman