The Lexicon of FeelingAll wordsInteractive app

Curiosity

[ˌkjʊəriˈɒsɪti] · kyoor-ee-OSS-ih-tee · English · noun
positiveintensity: mediumanticipation

The desire to know, learn, or investigate.

Definition

The desire to know, learn, or investigate — the pull toward the unknown.

Connotation & usage

Specifically the desire to know or resolve a gap in understanding, goal-directed toward acquiring knowledge — where interest is broad, mild engagement and fascination is intense absorption. Overlaps intrigue, but intrigue is curiosity piqued by something mysterious, whereas curiosity can attach to anything one wants to know. Oriented to present unknowns rather than future outcomes (unlike hope or anticipation). Can be a momentary state or a stable trait; note the mildly negative “nosiness” subsense.

Related words

Etymology

From Latin cura “care” → curiosus “inquiring eagerly, meddlesome” → curiositas “desire of knowledge.” Entered English late 14c., often in bad senses (“prying; vain interest”).

How it has changed

A shift in evaluative tone: in Middle English it commonly meant prying or vain interest; the neutral-to-positive “desire to learn what is unknown” emerged in the early 17th century. The concrete sense “a rare or strange object” is from the 1640s (giving “curiosity-shop”). No reliable recent-generation shift.

Sources

Explore “Curiosity” in the interactive dictionary →
From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.