0 interested in learning about people or things around you: --
2 interested in learning about people or things around you: --
[ + to infinitive ] I’m curious to see what’s going to happen on the political scene.
In addition, the editors' decision to include names among the dictionary entries leads to curious inconsistencies.
However, a significant weakness is its handling of sources, which is curious as the work is essentially a doctoral dissertation.
A combed skein of hair forms the background to the smaller images, which explains the curious criss-crossing in the crook of the swimsuited woman's arm.
The widespread association of this disease with a dissolute life-style also explains a curious double standard regarding consumptive women.
Even the mythtellers, texts, and social practices mentioned in passing are subjected to some curious transformations.
Developed in the age of capital, the term "potboiler" rests on a curious proposition about production: that artists can produce their own fakes.
The attempt to discredit sectarian practices asserted the professionalism of regular medicine by implicitly disavowing its curious past as well as asserting its clinical present.
This opening passage stages a most curious scene, indeed, foregrounding the physician's own curiosity and initial inability to explain the mysterious silence of his friend.