Definition of Incuriously. Meaning of Incuriously. Synonyms of Incuriously

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Incuriously. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Incuriously and, of course, Incuriously synonyms and on the right images related to the word Incuriously.

Definition of Incuriously

Incuriously
Incuriously In*cu"ri*ous*ly, adv. In an curious manner.

Meaning of Incuriously from wikipedia

- characters—Officers Minogue and O'Leary—first appeared in the film as a pair of incurious police officers. The series was created by Taika Waititi, Jemaine Clement...
- parodying pop stars such as Kesha with her performance as Riley Banks, an incurious blonde singer. Roberts said in an interview that her role as Banks tempted...
- Stephens, Scott (27 May 2011). "Catholic ****ual abuse study greeted with incurious contempt". ABC Religion and Ethics. Retrieved 23 July 2012. Lattin, Don...
- Barker of Variety magazine called it "Dull, flavorless, and fundamentally incurious, “The Outsider” is a clueless misfire, the cinematic equivalent of a study-abroad...
- rising star of Napoleon Bonaparte. But he found the conqueror of Italy incurious about the Irish situation and needing a war of conquest, not of liberation...
- which affects or provides expression for his own obsession, and entirely incurious about anything that affects anyone else.": 158  Nabokov, who famously...
- attempts to end their affair, despite Nicole's approaching wedding. And even incurious Cleaver works out that the emotional rollercoasters of both Nicole and...
- means that his account of the role of Conservatives is rather p****ive and incurious. A Swedish translation was published in 2016. The book has also been translated...
- Peter Bradshaw wrote, "This film is joyless, p****ionless, humourless, incurious about real people's real lives. There is no energy or verve, just the...
- Bradshaw said the film was "let down by sitcom cliches, and by being weirdly incurious about the inner life of its female lead." Mark Adams of the Daily Mirror...