I’m curious will you become interested?

Should I use “i’m curious as to if you’re

still interested.” as this grammar? Why? I’ve also thought of ‘curious in if you’re still interested’, neither now sound right and starting to question.

Which word/call may well be appropriate (w/f) if my phone isn’t detected from the tea machine but can’t be seen because it has the wrong w key?

Asked on March 28, 2021 in Grammar.
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83 Answer(s)

Is there a

better alternative? Or is it in your opinion? Are you still interested in reading our papers, or doing some research? – Prosaic

I’m curious…. still interested? So what do you think of it? – Informal (valid grammar), absent!

Interested am I. When were you and why? – Rhetorical

(Forget the ‘w’)

– Mystical (Forget why the’w’ does not form the”’).

Answered on May 6, 2021.
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Grammatically speaking, the answer is no.

As far as I know noun clauses of if cannot serve as the object following a preposition. Nor does “as to if…” nor in if…” in a sentence is valid.
All noun clauses directed by if can serve as the direct object of a transitive verb, so it is ok to say

I’m curious to know if you’re still interested.

Where “if you’re still interested” serves as the object of know.

Is it possible to replace by whether in your original sentence, because noun clauses led by whether can be used almost the same as is an ordinary noun: it can serve as the subject, the noun predicate, or the object of both verbs and prepositions. You can say I’m

curious as to whether you are still interested.

Which alternative is grammatically correct and sounds acceptable to me while the previous one is not so good?

Answered on May 12, 2021.
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Grammatically speaking, the answer is no.

As far as I know noun clauses of if cannot serve as the object following a preposition. Nor does “as to if…” nor in if…” in a sentence is valid.
All noun clauses directed by if can serve as the direct object of a transitive verb, so it is ok to say

I’m curious to know if you’re still interested.

Where “if you’re still interested” serves as the object of know.

Is it possible to replace by whether in your original sentence, because noun clauses led by whether can be used almost the same as is an ordinary noun: it can serve as the subject, the noun predicate, or the object of both verbs and prepositions. You can say I’m

curious as to whether you are still interested.

Which alternative is grammatically correct and sounds acceptable to me while the previous one is not so good?

Answered on May 12, 2021.
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Is there a

better alternative? Or is it in your opinion? Are you still interested in reading our papers, or doing some research? – Prosaic

I’m curious…. still interested? So what do you think of it? – Informal (valid grammar), absent!

Interested am I. When were you and why? – Rhetorical

(Forget the ‘w’)

– Mystical (Forget why the’w’ does not form the”’).

Answered on May 16, 2021.
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“I’m curious to see

if you’re interested”

Answered on May 16, 2021.
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“I’m curious to see

if you’re interested”

Answered on May 19, 2021.
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“I’m curious to see

if you’re interested”

Answered on May 19, 2021.
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“I’m curious to see

if you’re interested”

Answered on May 21, 2021.
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“I’m curious to see

if you’re interested”

Answered on May 25, 2021.
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“I’m curious to see

if you’re interested”

Answered on May 6, 2021.
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