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blinder    音标拼音: [bl'ɑɪndɚ]
n. 眼罩



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  • What does ‘play a blinder’ mean? Is it a popular phrase?
    play a blinder perform very well informal Dating from the 1950s, blinder is a colloquial term for 'dazzlingly good piece of play' in sport, especially in rugby or cricket [Example:] 2001 Sun Gilles will start and I would just love him to play a blinder and score a couple of goals to knock Southampton out of the cup
  • single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I think it's called a blinder (not sure though) but is there a proper term for this accessory in English? Preferably something that is used by Race Organizers? Update 1: The definition I found from Wiktionary A screen attached to a horse's bridle preventing it from being able to see things to its side My question - Does a blinder have other
  • etymology - Whats the origin of rob someone blind? - English . . .
    You could compare this with the BrE expression playing [or pulling] a blinder This is a UK sports idiom for a brilliant performance, and used metaphorically in other areas (stackexchange) ie, the performance or trick is so stunningly brilliant that it 'blinds' the opponents and comprehensively defeats them There is also blind alley A blind
  • To raise lower the blinds or to draw the blinds?
    "Raise lower" would be correct Instead of "pull", one tends to hear "put" instead i e "put the blinds up", "put the blinds down"
  • colloquialisms - Is the term blind spot something that only native . . .
    Blind spot, at least when it means the part of the eye without photo-receptors, seems to have exactly the same name (or with the words reversed) calqued in a large number of different languages: point aveugle in French, Blinder Fleck in German, অন্ধবিন্দু in Bengali, bintik buta in Malay, 盲点 in Japanese, and many more
  • adjectives - Is there a word that means deliberately ignorant . . .
    tactical stupidity lame Passive-aggressive wilful ignorance wilful blindness bury one's head in the sand in denial three wise monkeys attitude cognitive bias optimism bias ostrich effect obstinate apathetic negligent blinder-wearer wilful neglect cowardice selfish delusional irresponsible psychopathic sociopathic socially impaired obdurate
  • Single word for people who are like a frog in the well
    I would go for "self-centered and lacking in situational context" A more colloquial term would be that the person is "wearing blinders", which comes from horses wearing blinders to prevent them from seeing things that could potentially startle or alarm them
  • single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • etymology - What is the origin of the word efforting? - English . . .
    Conclusion In my research, I didn't find any instances of efforting used in the obsolete transitive sense that Wiktionary attributes to effort as a verb; the instance of efforted that Wiktionary cites is legitimate and interesting, but I didn't find any other instances in which efforted clearly carried the old sense of the word
  • Are there English figurative expressions equivalent to Japanese idiom . . .
    @John Mee, per Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dict, they are equivalent for one of the meanings of blink·er noun 2 a (1) : blinder 1 (2) : a cloth hood with shades projecting at the sides of the eye openings used on skittish racehorses — usually used in plural –





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