different between incurious vs incuriously
incurious
English
Etymology
From Latin inc?ri?sus (“careless”), from in- (“un-”) and c?ri?sus (“careful”). Attested since the 1560s, originally meaning ‘heedless and negligent.’ The sense of ‘uninquisitive’ dates from the 1610s, and the sense of ‘unworthy of attention’ from 1747.
Adjective
incurious (comparative more incurious, superlative most incurious)
- Lacking interest or curiosity; uninterested.
- Apathetic or indifferent.
Translations
References
incurious From the web:
- incurious meaning
- what does incurs mean
- what is incurious
- what does incurs synonym
- what does incurs mean in english
- what is an incurious person
incuriously
English
Etymology
incurious +? -ly
Adverb
incuriously (comparative more incuriously, superlative most incuriously)
- In an incurious manner.
incuriously From the web:
- incurious meaning
- what does incurs mean
- what does incurs synonym
- what is incurious
- what does incurs mean in english
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- incurious vs incuriously
- jargle vs dargle
- terms vs jargle
- jangle vs jargle
- jargle vs gargle
- jargled vs jargle
- sound vs jargle
- harsh vs jargle
- dargle vs dartle
- dargle vs darkle
- dargle vs daggle
- dangle vs dargle
- dargle vs dargue
- gargle vs dargle
- jargled vs jargles
- jargled vs jangled
- jargled vs gargled
- alarmclock vs countdown
- countdown vs offspring
- countdown vs mountdown