The Curious Case Of Moriarty's Fictional Death And Its Obituaries

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For fans of true crime and stranger-than-fiction stories, Investigation Discovery’s The Curious Case Of… series is becoming appointment television. After captivating us (and, yes, occasionally ...

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ID’s ‘Curious Case Of…’ Has Our Jaws on the Floor: 5 Most Bizarre Cases

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Can anyone explain to me the exact meaning of the above? For example: "I am curious to meet your brother". What does "curious" mean in this context? I have a feeling that I know what it means as a complete sentence but I am not entirely sure what the word "curious" entails here.

Have you finished yet? He is curious, if I have already finished. 1)Is the change of 'yet' to 'already' necessary? 2)Could we keep 'yet'? : He is curious, if I have finished yet. Thank you

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Nevertheless, I´d be curious to learn which form you would personally prefer, quite apart from the millions upon millions in favour of the version I enquired about. Do you mean to say that the version in question in wrong, but since it is widely accepted, since it can´t be helped, it has to be tolerated?

I find this idiom: "good friend-material" and curious to know the meaning. I grab it from a novel I'm reading. Are you sure it was "good friend-material" and not "girlfriend material"? Honestly, "good friend-material" doesn't make any sense. :-? Even with the punctuation correction provided above by Tripp, I can't say I ever heard anyone say this.

I'm new here so hello to all. I'm just curious about that problem in the title. Which form is correct? I've checked in english grammar that in simple past tense when using negative form you should put first didn't and then after this the verb in infinitive. But it sounds a little bizarre...

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