Curious (pronounced kyoor-ee-uhs)
(1) Eager
to learn or know; inquisitive; interested, inquiring
(2) Prying;
meddlesome, overly inquisitive.
(3) Arousing
or exciting speculation, interest, or attention through being inexplicable or
highly unusual; odd; strange.
(4) Made or
prepared skilfully (archaic).
(5) Done
with painstaking accuracy or attention to detail (archaic).
(6) Careful;
fastidious (archaic).
(7) Marked
by intricacy or subtlety (archaic).
(8) In inorganic chemistry, containing or pertaining to trivalent curium (rare).
1275–1325: From the Middle English curious, from the Old French curius (solicitous, anxious, inquisitive; odd, strange (which endures in Modern French as curieux)), from the Latin cūriōsus (careful, diligent; inquiring eagerly, meddlesome, inquisitive), the construct being cūri- (a combining form of cūra (care) + -ōsus . The –ōsus suffix (familiar in English as –ous) was from Classical Latin from -ōnt-to-s from -o-wont-to-s, the latter form a combination of two primitive Indo-European suffixes: -went & -wont. Related to these were –entus and the Ancient Greek -εις (-eis) and all were used to form adjectives from nouns. In Latin, -ōsus was added to a noun to form an adjective indicating an abundance of that noun. The English word was cognate with Italian curioso, the Occitan curios, the Portuguese curioso and the Spanish curioso. The original sense in the early fourteenth century appears to have been “subtle, sophisticated” but by the late 1300s this had been augmented by “eager to know, inquisitive, desirous of seeing” (often in a bad (ie “busybody”) sense and also “wrought with or requiring care and art”, all these meaning reflecting the Latin original. The objective sense of “exciting curiosity” was in use by at least 1715 but in booksellers' catalogues of the mid-nineteenth century, the word was a euphemism for “erotic, pornographic”, such material called curiosa the Latin neuter plural of cūriōsus. That was not however what was in the mind of Charles Dickens (1812–1870) when he wrote The Old Curiosity Shop (1840-1841).
The derived
forms include noncurious, overcurious, supercurious, uncurious & incuruious. Both uncurious and incurious are rare and
between them there is a difference in meaning and usage, but it is much weaker
and less consistently observed than the distinction drawn (though not always
observed) between disinterest and uninterest.
Incurious means “lacking curiosity; not inclined to inquire or wonder”
and often carries a critical or evaluative tone, implying intellectual
complacency or narrow-mindedness; it can be applied to individuals but seems
more often used of groups. Uncurious
means “usually not curious” and tends to be descriptive rather than judgmental. Being rarely used and obscure in what exactly
is denoted, some style guides list them as awkward and best avoided,
recommending being explicit about what is meant. Curious is an adjective, curiousness &
curiosity are nouns, curiously is an adverb; the noun plural curiosities. The comparative more curious or curiouser and
the superlative most curious or curiousest
The proverb
“curiosity killed the cat” means “one should not be curious about things that don’t
concern one”. The phrase “curiouser and
curiouser” comes from Alice’s Adventures
in Wonderland (1865) by the English author Lewis Carroll (pen name of
Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (1832–1898)).
As a modern, idiomatic form, it’s used to describe or react to an
increasingly mysterious or peculiar situation (though usually not one thought
threatening). Alice made her famous exclamation
after experiences increasingly bizarre transformations and other strange events
in Wonderland; later, what was described would be thought surrealistic. The phrase has endured and it appears often
in literature and popular culture, London’s Victoria and Albert Museum even
holding the Alice: Curiouser and
Curiouser event. The author’s use of
“bad English” was deliberate, a device to convey the child’s sense of
bewildered confusion. In standard
English, the comparative of "curious" is “more curious” with the –er
suffix usually appended to words with one or two syllables. The word “curiouser” thus inhabits a special
niche in that although mainstream dictionaries usually list it as “informal” or
“non-standard” (ie “wrong”), unlike most “mistakes”, because it’s a literary
reference, it’s a “respectable” word (if used in the phrase). In that, it’s something like “it ain’t
necessarily so”.
Depiction of the mad hatter’s tea party by Sir John Tenniel (1820-1914) in an edition called Nursery Alice (1890), an abridged version of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland intended for children under five (the original drawing now held by the British Museum). The book contained 20 illustrations by Sir John who also provided the artwork for the full-length publication. A fine craftsman, Sir John was noted also for his moustache which “out-Nietzsched” Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900). Despite much later speculation, no evidence has ever emerged to suggest Lewis Carroll was under the influence of drugs when writing the “Alice” books
Special derived
adjectival uses of curious include the portmanteau word “epicurious” (curious
about food, especially wishing to try new dishes and cuisines), the construct
being epicu(reean) + (cu)rious. Although the notion of Epicureans (those who are followers
of Epicureanism) being focused on food is overstated, that’s the way the word
usually appears in popular use. “Indy-curious”
is from UK politics and refers to those interested in the possibility of
independence for Wales, without necessarily being a supporter of the
proposal. Those who are “veg-curious” are
interested in or contemplating a vegetarian or vegan diet.
The word
“curious” became an element in the punch-lines of some “gay jokes” (a now
extinct species outside the gay community) but survived in derived forms in sexology,
presumably because they can be used neutrally.
The constructs include (1) “pancurious” (exhibiting a state of
uncertainty about one's pansexual or panromantic status), (2) “bi-curious” (interested
in having relationships with both men and women, curious about one's potential
bisexuality; considering a first sexual experience with a member of the same
sex (used especially of heterosexuals), (3) gay-curious (curious about one's
homosexuality; curious to try homosexuality (4) homocurious (questioning
whether one is homosexual), (5) polycurious (curious about or open to
polyamory; potentially interested in having relationships with multiple
partners and (6) trans-curious (interested in one's potential transness or the
experience of a sexual encounter with a trans person. None of these forms seem to be in frequent
use and some may have been created to “cover the field” and there may be some
overlap (such as between pancurious and polycurious) and that at least some may
be spectrum conditions seems implicit in the way dictionaries list comparative and
superlative forms (eg more bi-curious; most bi-curious).
The synonyms
include enquiring, inquiring; exquisitive; investigative and the now rare peery,
the latter a use of curious in the vein of the “meddling priest” (ie a
“busybody” tending to ask questions or wishing to explore or investigate
matters not of their concern). Such a
person could be labelled a quidnunc (gossip-monger, one who is curious to know
everything that happens) a word (originally as quid nunc) from the early 1700s,
the construct being the Latin quid (what?
(neuter of interrogative pronoun quis
(who?) from the primitive Indo-European root kwo-, stem of relative and interrogative pronouns)) + nunc (now); the idea was of someone habitually
asking “What's
the news?” and that phrase was one with which for decades the press
baron Lord Beaverbrook (Maxwell Aitken, 1879-1964) would pester his
editors. The other group of synonyms
reference the word in its “funny-peculiar” sense and include queer, curious:
weird, odd, strange & bizarre. Such an individual, concept or object can be called “a curiosity” and that’s
reflected in the noun “curio” which dates from 1851 and meant originally “piece
of bric-a-brac from the Far East” and was a short form of curiosity in the mid
seventeenth century sense of “object of interest”’ by the 1890s it was in use
to refer to rare or interesting bric-a-brac (or just about anything otherwise
unclassified) from anywhere. The related
curioso was in use by the 1650s and for two centuries-odd was a word describing
“one who is curious" (of science, art, metaphysics and such) or “one who
admires or collects curiosities”; it was from the Italian curioso (a curious soul (person)).
1971 Plymouths in Curious Yellow (code GY3): 'Cuda 340 (left) and GTX (right).
Although buyers
of Ferraris, Porsches, Lamborghinis and such still often order cars in bright
colors, most of the world’s fleet had for some years been restricted mostly to white,
black and variants of silver & gray; it’s a phase the world is going
through and it can’t be predicted how long this visually sober ere will last. In the US in the late 1960s it was different
and like other manufacturers, Chrysler had some history in the coining of
fanciful names for the “High Impact” colors dating from the psychedelic era. Emerging from their marketing departments
came Plum Crazy, In-Violet, Tor Red, Limelight, Sub Lime, Sassy
Grass, Panther Pink, Moulin Rouge, Top Banana, Lemon Twist & Citron Yella. That the most lurid colors vanished during
the 1970s was not because of changing tastes but in response to environmental
& public health legislation which banned the use of lead in automotive
paints; without the additive, production of the bright colours was
prohibitively expensive. Advances in
chemistry meant that by the twenty-first century brightness could be achieved
without the addition of lead so Dodge revived psychedelia for a new generation
although Sub Lime became Sublime.
Criterion's re-issue of I Am Curious (Blue) and I Am Curious (Blue) with edited (colorized) artwork. The original posters were monochrome.
Two years into the first administration of Richard Nixon (1913-1994; US VPOTUS 1953-1961 & POTUS 1969-1974), and a year on from his declaration of a “War on Drugs”, it was obvious the psychedelic era was over but bright colors were still popular so come were carried over although the advertising became noticeably “less druggy”. Although it may be an industry myth, the story told is that Plum Crazy & In-Violet (lurid shades of purple) were in 1969 late additions because the killjoy board refused to sign-off on Statutory Grape but despite that, Plymouth for 1971 decided to change the name of their vibrant hue of yellow from “Citron Yella” to “Curious Yellow” (code GY3), that apparently borrowed from the controversial 1967 Swedish erotic film I Am Curious (Yellow), directed by Vilgot Sjöman (1924-2006); it was followed the following year by I Am Curious (Blue), the two intended originally as 3½ hour epic. As promoted at the time, the films were advertised as “I Am Curious: A Film in Yellow” and “I Am Curious: A Film in Blue”, the mention of the colors an allusion to the Swedish flag.
A footnote to the earlier film is an uncredited appearance by Olof Palme (1927–1986; Prime Minister of Sweden 1969-1976 & 1982-1986) whose assassination remains unsolved. The films are very much period pieces of a time when on-screen depictions of sex were for the first time in some places liberated from most censorship and while this produced an entire genre of blends of eroticism and pornography, some directors couldn’t resist interpolating political commentary (of the left and right); at the time, just about everything (sex included) could be sociological. Critic and audiences mostly were unconvinced but films like the “Curious” brace and Michelangelo Antonioni’s (1912–2007) Zabriskie Point (1970) later gained a cult following. Problems encountered during production resulted in the release of Zabriskie Point being delayed until 1970 but in retrospective this was a blessing because if anyone doubted the spirit of the 1960s had died, the film was there to remove all doubt. A commercial failure, visually, it remains a feast for students of pre-digital cinematography and some maintain the best way to enjoy subsequent viewings is to mute the sound and play the soundtrack on repeat; unsynchronized with the scenes, its an experience rewarding in its own way.



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