blind
blind 英 [blaɪnd] 美 [blaɪnd]
adj. 盲目的;瞎的 n. 盲,盲人 vt. 使失明;
进行时:blinding 过去式:blinded 过去分词:blinded 第三人称单数:blinds 名词复数:blinds 比较级:blinder 最高级:blindest
- Someone who's blind can't see. People who are blind can often get around easily with the aid of a cane and sometimes a service dog.
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- adj. 盲目的;瞎的
- n. 盲,盲人
- vt. 使失明;
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1. Doctors think he will go blind.
医生们认为他会失明。
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2. One of her parents is blind.
她的父母有一个是盲人。
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3. guide dogs for the blind
导盲犬
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4. She is blind to her husband's faults.
她对丈夫的过错毫无察觉。
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5. It was a moment of blind panic.
这是一阵莫名的惊慌。
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6. the blind force of nature
无法抵挡的自然力(无理性的力量)
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7. a blind bend,a blind corner,
隐蔽的弯道╱拐角 盲角
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8. She was blinded in the explosion.
她在那场爆炸中双目失明了。
- blind (adj.) Old English blind "destitute of sight," also "dark, enveloped in darkness, obscure; unintelligent, lacking mental perception," probably from Proto-Germanic *blinda- "blind" (source also of Dutch and German blind, Old Norse blindr, Gothic blinds "blind"), perhaps, via notion of "to make cloudy, deceive," from an extended Germanic form of the PIE root *bhel-(1) "to shine, flash, burn."
- blind (n.) "a blind person; blind persons collectively," late Old English, from blind (adj.). Meaning "place of concealment," especially for a hunter or fowler, is from 1640s. Meaning "anything that obstructs sight" is from 1702.
- blind (v.) "make blind, deprive of sight," early 13c., from Old English blendan "to blind, deprive of sight; deceive," from Proto-Germanic *blandjan (source also of Old Frisian blinda, Dutch blinden, Old High German blinden "become blind;" Danish blinde, Gothic gablindjan "make blind"), perhaps, via notion of "to make cloudy, deceive," from an extended Germanic form of the PIE root *bhel-(1) "to shine, flash, burn (see blind (adj.)). Form influenced in Middle English by the adjective. Related: Blinded; blinding.
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