Blind: English to English |
Blind (a.) Abortive; failing to produce flowers or fruit; as, blind buds; blind flowers. |
Blind (a.) Destitute of the sense of seeing, either by natural defect or by deprivation; without sight. |
Blind (a.) Having no openings for light or passage; as, a blind wall; open only at one end; as, a blind alley; a blind gut. |
Blind (a.) Having such a state or condition as a thing would have to a person who is blind; not well marked or easily discernible; hidden; unseen; concealed; as, a blind path; a blind ditch. |
Blind (a.) Involved; intricate; not easily followed or traced. |
Blind (a.) Not having the faculty of discernment; destitute of intellectual light; unable or unwilling to understand or judge; as, authors are blind to their own defects. |
Blind (a.) Undiscerning; undiscriminating; inconsiderate. |
Blind (a.) Unintelligible, or not easily intelligible; as, a blind passage in a book; illegible; as, blind writing. |
Blind (n.) A blindage. See Blindage. |
Blind (n.) A halting place. |
Blind (n.) Alt. of Blinde |
Blind (n.) Something to hinder sight or keep out light; a screen; a cover; esp. a hinged screen or shutter for a window; a blinder for a horse. |
Blind (n.) Something to mislead the eye or the understanding, or to conceal some covert deed or design; a subterfuge. |
Blind (v. t.) To cover with a thin coating of sand and fine gravel; as a road newly paved, in order that the joints between the stones may be filled. |
Blind (v. t.) To darken; to obscure to the eye or understanding; to conceal; to deceive. |
Blind (v. t.) To deprive partially of vision; to make vision difficult for and painful to; to dazzle. |
Blind (v. t.) To make blind; to deprive of sight or discernment. |