📒 not able to see
- Doctors think he will go blind.
- She went blind at the age of ten.
- blind and partially sighted people
📒 people who are blind
- recorded books for the blind
- guide dogs for the blind
📒 not noticing or realizing something
- She is blind to her husband's faults.
- I must have been blind not to realize the danger we were in.
- They seem to be totally blind to reality.
📒 seeming to be unreasonable, and accepted without question; seeming to be out of control
- blind faith/obedience
- It was a moment of blind panic.
📒 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
- a blind bend/corner
📒 that does not make a difference between people on the basis of the quality mentioned, or favour one group over another
- In a piece of gender-blind casting, Hamlet is played by British actress Maxine Peake.
- She is very suspicious of anyone who claims to be race-blind.
📒 not able to see well
- She’s as blind as a bat without her glasses.
📒 a situation in which people with almost no experience or knowledge give advice to others who also have no experience or knowledge
📒 when you love somebody, you cannot see their faults
📒 not any
- He didn't take a blind bit of notice of me (= he ignored me).
- It won't make the blindest bit of difference (= it will make no difference at all).
📒 to pretend not to notice something bad that is happening, so you do not have to do anything about it
- The authorities were either unaware of the problem or they turned a blind eye to it.