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  1. Dictionary
    blind
    /blʌɪnd/

    adjective

    verb

    noun

    adverb

    • 1. without being able to see clearly: "he was the first pilot in history to fly blind"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of BLIND is sightless. How to use blind in a sentence. sightless; having less than 1/10 of normal vision in the more efficient eye when refractive defects are fully corrected by lenses…

  3. BLIND definition: 1. unable to see: 2. used to describe an extreme feeling that happens without thought or reason…. Learn more.

  4. unable to see; having severely impaired or absolutely no sense of sight; sightless: a blind man. Antonyms: seeing. unwilling or unable to perceive or understand: He was blind to all arguments. They were blind to their children's faults. He was blind to all arguments. Antonyms: receptive.

  5. If something blinds you, it makes you unable to see, either for a short time or permanently. The sun hit the windscreen, momentarily blinding him. American English : blind / ˈblaɪnd /

  6. [usually before noun] (of a situation or an event) that cannot be controlled by reason. blind chance. the blind force of nature. that a driver in a car cannot see, or cannot see around. a blind driveway.

  7. unable to see; having severely impaired or absolutely no sense of sight; sightless: a blind man. Antonyms: seeing. unwilling or unable to perceive or understand: He was blind to all arguments. They were blind to their children's faults. He was blind to all arguments. Antonyms: receptive.

  8. BLIND meaning: 1. not able to see: 2. to not notice something, or not want to notice something: 3. an extremely…. Learn more.

  9. Definitions of blind. adjective. unable to see. “"a person is blind to the extent that he must devise alternative techniques to do efficiently those things he would do with sight if he had normal vision"--Kenneth Jernigan” synonyms: unsighted. blinded. deprived of sight. blindfold, blindfolded. wearing a blindfold. color-blind, colour-blind.

  10. A partially blind, poor, black man with little or no book learning outside of the Bible heard a call. • Krauss never takes anything on blind trust. • A nearby snack shop run by an organization of blind workers has shut down.

  11. Having certain information concealed or withheld intentionally. A blind ad, a blind test. Webster's New World. Of or for sightless persons. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. More Adjective Definitions (23) Synonyms: concealed. hidden. unsighted. involved.