curiosity
/ˌkjʊəɹɪˈɒsɪti/
This word carries a dual energy. In its psychological sense, it is an intellectual hunger that drives exploration and discovery. While often positive, it can veer into prying or nosiness if it crosses social boundaries, suggesting a restlessness of the mind that cannot be satisfied with surface-level information. When referring to objects, the word shifts toward the aesthetic and the eccentric. It evokes the image of a cabinet of curiosities, where the value of an item lies not in its utility, but in its strangeness or rarity. In this sense, it describes things that provoke wonder or bewilderment.
Uncountable when describing the internal drive to learn (she has a lot of curiosity). Countable when referring to odd objects found in a shop (he collected several curiosities).
💬Casual Conversation
Just out of curiosity, can you peek into my emails? I think I'm being hacked.
Stop messing around and just restart your PC. It's probably a glitch.
Meanings
Etymology
Derived from the Latin word curiositas, which stems from curiosus, meaning careful or inquiring. This was formed from cura, meaning care, combined with the suffix -osus. The term evolved from describing a meticulous attention to detail into denoting a desire for knowledge or the possession of rare items.