• @[email protected]
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            113 hours ago

            I read the whole thing. I didn’t see any examples of “it is curious”, only “I am curious”.

            • @just_another_person
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              13 hours ago

              You’re really making me work for it when you could just read it and back off:

              The specific usage of “curious if” is perfectly acceptable in much the say way that “curious whether” is acceptable. It does not imply a conditional.

              I’m curious whether other people feel like I do.

              “Curious,” by the way, has a few other variants:

              I’m curious if other people feel like I do.

              I’m curious as to whether other people feel like I do.

              I’m curious about whether people feel like I do.

              To directly answer your question:

              However, is it actually improper or logically incorrect?

              No, it is not improper or logically incorrect. Which of these is more appropriate is a matter of personal and regional preferences.

              • @[email protected]
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                13 hours ago

                So a complete version of your original comment would be, per these examples, “I am curious about who sponsored it”? Because my original reply was a response to the implied question: it says who sponsored it in the article, so you can read it and find out. If my inference was incorrect, please clarify. That’s why I recommended using complete, unambiguous sentences in the first place.