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.
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  • 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
  • He was beefy, pale and, like a lot of professional sportsmen, catatonically incurious. TEN STEPS TO HAPPINESS
  • Between them sits another figure, less traditional, less incurious.
  • In addition to the adviser's name and some information about the construction of the language, I'd still like to understand why the journalists involved are so incurious about the details of this aspect of the movie.
  • The generalisation is so sweeping, so incurious, and so final that it is utterly meaningless.
  • I began wondering what kind of civilization could be rich enough to build a star-ship, free enough to allow it to be in private hands, incurious enough to only build one.
  • Maria Full of Grace, on the other hand, is pretty incurious about Maria's position in the drug trade's macro-economics.
  • In your background, Mr. President, you apparently were incurious.
  • About such drivers of status affluence Mr. Best is frustratingly incurious. Why We're All Above Average
  • The idea that happiness is desire-satisfaction seems suitably neutral on the content of happy lives, allowing happiness to the intellectual and the incurious alike as long as they are getting what they desire.
  • Discussions of the American alliance in this volume, and our economic and cultural bonds therein, are in general incurious, dogmatic and one-dimensional.
  • His cellmates seemed incurious as to how an elderly British pensioner had found himself in prison and Bond was in no mood to enlighten them.
  • It is why Democrats actually pass plicies that make sense, and it is also why Democrats get so tired of talking to conservatives who are so freakin incurious that they will accept whatever their "daddies" at fux and talk radio tell them, even when it contradicts what they so heartily "believed" the day before. White House's top health care spokeswoman resigning post
  • They all started making films three decades or more ago, when documentaries were considered more than rhetorical bludgeons and instructional tools for the incurious and semi-literate.
  • It helps that he's a nice, if not too clever, guy and his wife is incurious.
  • I hated how it was brainwashing a generation of bright and well-intentioned children, transforming them into a ghettoized and incurious suburban middle-class.
  • How do you render them incurious and intellectually languid, with only nervous energy and shallow greed to fill the mental vacuum?
  • Frankly it doesn't matter if the "intellectually incurious" W fully understands that he'll be gaining nothing by pushing egomaniacally for this surge. Prior to 2000 W proved he was a stone-cold killer.
  • She was an undemanding friend, ready to listen with attention, whereas I was incurious about her, perhaps assuming that since she was so young, she had nothing to teach me about books or life, an idea which seemed terribly sad years later.
  • What about that curiously incurious cadaver, the body politic?
  • Yet Dr. Armistead had been downright incurious about her work. THE LAST PLACE
  • It has never been so scrupulous in its methods, so inclusive in the questions it asks - and so incurious about what might be called the aesthetic life of a building.
  • strangely incurious about the cause of the political upheaval surrounding them
  • Bruner observed, as have I and countless others, that the end game of this iteration of education is seen in many of the incurious, grade-grubbing, high-achieving students spawned over the past few decades. Steve Nelson: The Dark Side of Acing the Tests
  • As with Annie, years before, Bartlemy's manner was unhurried and incurious. THE GREENSTONE GRAIL: THE SANGREAL TRILOGY ONE
  • In fact, it's sometimes incurious about his life and work, concentrating rather on the mix of fragments, whispers and urban myths that have arisen about Pynchon, due to his aversion to being photographed or interviewed.
  • Btw, it may pass notice without an overt mention, but the earlier reference to the "unholy" trinity - of facile contempt, philistine incomprehension and an incurious and willful blindness - is "unholy" vis-a-vis the very best and most rigorous of post-Enlightenment (i.e. rational and transparent) standards, not the pseudo-standards of some strawman, stereotypical, backwards looking fideism. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...

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