define blind - Search
  1. Dictionary

    blind
    [blīnd]
    adjective
    blind (adjective) · blinder (comparative adjective) · blindest (superlative adjective)
    1. unable to see because of injury, disease, or a congenital condition:
      "a blind man" · "he was blind in one eye" · "she suffered from glaucoma, which has left her completely blind"
      • (of an action, especially a test or experiment) done without being able to see or without being in possession of certain information:
        "a blind tasting of eight wines"
      • aeronautics
        (of flying) using instruments only:
        "blind landings during foggy conditions"
    2. lacking perception, awareness, or discernment:
      "she was blind to the realities of her position" · "he's absolutely blind where you're concerned, isn't he?"
      • (of an action or state of mind) not controlled by reason or judgment:
        "they left in blind panic"
      • not governed by purpose:
        "moving purposelessly in a world of blind chance"
    3. (of a corner or bend in a road) impossible to see around:
      "two trucks collided on a blind curve in the road"
      • (of a door or window) walled up:
        "fresco paintings on the blind windows"
      • closed at one end:
        "a blind pipe"
    4. BRITISH ENGLISH
      informal
      (used in emphatic expressions) not the slightest:
      "you don't know a blind thing!"
    5. (of a plant) without buds, eyes, or terminal flowers:
      "planting too shallowly is the most common cause of bulbs coming up blind"
    6. informal
      drunk.
    verb
    blind (verb) · blinds (third person present) · blinded (past tense) · blinded (past participle) · blinding (present participle)
    1. cause (someone) to be unable to see, permanently or temporarily:
      "the injury temporarily blinded him" · "eyes blinded with tears"
    2. (be blinded)
      deprive (someone) of understanding, judgment, or perception:
      "somehow Clare and I were blinded to the truth" · "a clever tactician blinded by passion"
      • (blind someone with)
        confuse or overawe someone with something difficult to understand:
        "they try to blind you with science"
    noun
    the blind (plural noun) · blind (noun) · blinds (plural noun)
    1. (the blind )
      people who are unable to see:
      "guide dogs for the blind"
    2. a screen for a window, especially one on a roller or made of slats:
      "she pulled down the blinds"
      • BRITISH ENGLISH
        an awning over a shop window.
    3. something designed to conceal one's real intentions:
      "he phoned again from his own home: that was just a blind for his wife"
      • a hiding place:
        "you can sometimes use your car as a blind"
      • NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISH
        a camouflaged shelter used by hunters to get close to wildlife:
        "a duck blind"
    4. BRITISH ENGLISH
      informal
      dated
      a heavy drinking bout:
      "he's off on a blind again"
    5. BRITISH ENGLISH
      a legitimate business concealing a criminal enterprise.
    adverb
    blind (adverb)
    1. without being able to see clearly:
      "he was the first pilot in history to fly blind"
      • without having all the relevant information; unprepared:
        "he was going into the interview blind"
      • (of a stake in poker and other games) put up by a player before the cards dealt are seen.
    Origin
    Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch and German blind.
    Translate blind to
    No translation found.
    Similar and Opposite Words
    adjective
    1. unable to see because of injury, disease, or a congenital condition:
      Opposite:
      • lacking perception, awareness, or discernment:
      verb
      1. cause (someone) to be unable to see, permanently or temporarily:
        make blind
        deprive of sight
        deprive of vision
        render unsighted
        render sightless
        gouge someone's eyes out
        stop someone seeing
        obscure someone's vision
        block someone's vision
        get in someone's line of vision
      2. deprive (someone) of understanding, judgment, or perception:
        deprive of understanding
        deprive of perception
        deprive of judgment
        deprive of reason
        deprive of sense
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    2. 1 a (1) : sightless (2) : having less than ¹/₁₀ of normal vision in the more efficient eye when refractive defects are fully corrected by lenses b : of or relating to sightless persons
      www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/blind
      to not be conscious of something or to refuse to notice something that is obvious to others: She seems blind to his faults. See more blind adjective (CORNER, etc.) that a driver cannot see, or cannot see around: The accident happened on a blind bend.
      dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/blind
      adjective,blind·er, blind·est. unable to see; having severely impaired or absolutely no sense of sight; sightless: a blind man. unwilling or unable to perceive or understand: They were blind to their children's faults. He was blind to all arguments. not characterized or determined by reason or control: blind tenacity; blind chance.
      www.dictionary.com/browse/blind
      BLIND meaning: 1. not able to see: 2. to not notice something, or not want to notice something: 3. an extremely….
      dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/learner-engli…
       
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