incurious

英 [ɪnˈkjʊəriəs] 美 [ɪnˈkjʊriəs]

adj.  不感兴趣的; 不好奇的; 漫不经心的

BNC.46251 / COCA.40168



牛津词典

adj.

  1. 不感兴趣的;不好奇的;漫不经心的
    having no interest in knowing or discovering things

    双语例句

    1. The few self-reflective nationalists admit that their party is incurious about policy.
      一些自我反思的民族主义者承认,他们的政党对政策毫不关心。
    2. In this regard East Asian students are among the most clueless: too often incurious and self-absorbed, they are notoriously out of touch with American society, and also slow to form advocacy groups.
      但东亚的学生在这方面最没办法:他们往往缺少好奇心,一心只忙自己的事;他们与美国社会缺少接触则是众所周知的,同时也不善于组织团体来宣传。
    3. But if the pleasure of learning is universal, why are there so many dull, incurious people in the world?
      但是,如果学习的乐趣是普遍的,为什么有这么多乏味,在世界上是漠不关心的人?
    4. She gave the travellers a swift, incurious glance.
      她朝旅客们漫不经心地迅速扫了一眼。
    5. Strangely incurious about the cause of the political upheaval surrounding them.
      对他们身边政治剧变的原因莫名其妙的淡漠、不关心。
    6. Their sad, Mongolian faces gazed out over the sides of the trucks utterly incurious.
      他们那蒙古脸丑陋无比,漠然盯着车下的人群。
    7. But economists have been strikingly incurious about what those cognitive short-cuts actually are.
      但经济学家一直不关心这些认知捷径究竟是什么。
    8. Bush is largely incurious about the world; FDR and Churchill wanted to know everything.
      布什对世界事务多半不寻根问底,而罗斯福和丘吉尔却都想知道。

    英英释义

    adj

    1. showing absence of intellectual inquisitiveness or natural curiosity
      1. strangely incurious about the cause of the political upheaval surrounding them