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  1. BLINDSIDED definition: 1. past simple and past participle of blindside 2. to surprise someone, usually with harmful…. Learn more.

  2. The meaning of BLINDSIDE is to hit unexpectedly from or as if from the blind side. How to use blindside in a sentence.

  3. to surprise someone, usually with harmful results: The recession blindsided a lot of lawyers who had previously taken for granted their comfortable income. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Surprising and shocking. against all expectations phrase. amaze. amazingly. astonish. dumbfoundingly. dynamite. earth-shaking. earth-shatteringly.

  4. Blindsided definition: tackled, hit, or attacked by an opponent on the blind side, out of the player’s field of vision. See examples of BLINDSIDED used in a sentence.

  5. Blindside definition: to tackle, hit, or attack (an opponent) from the blind side. See examples of BLINDSIDE used in a sentence.

  6. 1. Sport. to tackle, hit, or attack (an opponent) from the blind side. The quarterback was blindsided and had the ball knocked out of his hand. 2. informal. to attack critically where a person is vulnerable, uninformed, etc. The president was blindsided by the press on the latest tax bill.

  7. To blindside is to launch a surprise attack, especially one that comes from an obstructed or hidden place. Your video game army might blindside your friend's army, resulting in your victory. If you come up from behind your brother and shove him, you can say that you blindside him.

  8. Definition of blindside verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. Define blindsided. blindsided synonyms, blindsided pronunciation, blindsided translation, English dictionary definition of blindsided. n. 1. The side on which one's vision, especially the peripheral vision, is limited or obstructed. 2. The side away from which one is directing one's...

  10. n. 1. the part of one's field of vision, as to the side or rear, where one cannot see approaching objects. 2. the side opposite that toward which a person is looking. [1600–10] blind•side. (ˈblaɪndˌsaɪd) v.t. -sid•ed, -sid•ing. 1. to hit or attack from the blind side. 2. to attack where a person is vulnerable. [1970–75]