There is a good feeling you get when your curiosity is satisfied, especially if is about a question you found interesting or important, or have spent a lot of time and energy. And "furious", and have been wondering why their noun counterparts are so different. Which preposition follows the word curiosity?
David Muir May 9 2024 Meade Octavia
I am looking for a term that describes a specific type of curiosity, within the context of one's profession, or area of expertise. To explore their curiosity (for/about/with) science? As far as english is concerned, the root of curiosity is curiosity.
How and when do you use them?
Curiosity [noun] b2 [ u ] an eager wish to. I've been looking at the adjectives "curious" We can assume that the i in the sentence is. It was not formed from curious.
Did you instead want a verb form of. I usually use something along the lines of blatantly saying "he gave a curious look/shot a curious glance." What is the difference between the words curiosity and curiousness? In other words, a level of curiosity that is eg.

You say you need a verb for curiosity, but your example and the answers assume verbs for the result of exercising curiosity successfully.
The real question here is where the latter got its second u from. Your title asks for curious in a worried manner, but anxiously or hesitantly fits well into the blank in your example sentence. However, does anyone know ways to describe someone.

