blindfold - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English blyndefolde, blyndfuld, blynfold, blindfeld, blindfelt, yblynfeld, variants of y-blyndfalled, blyndfelled, etc. ("stricken blind, blindfolded"), past participle of Middle English blindfellen (“to strike blind”), from blind (“to blind”) and fellen (“to fell”), equivalent to blind + felled. Later influenced by the unrelated verb fold.
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈblaɪndfəʊld/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈblaɪ̯ndfɔʊ̯ld/
- Hyphenation: blind‧fold
blindfold (plural blindfolds)
- A covering, usually a bandage, for the eyes, blocking light to the eyes.
I put a blindfold over my boyfriend's eyes and told him I had a surprise for him. - (sometimes figurative) Anything that obscures the vision.
a covering, usually a bandage, for the eyes — see also sleep mask
- Bulgarian: превръзка за очите f (prevrǎzka za očite)
- Catalan: bena (ca)
- Cherokee: ᏗᎦᏚᏢᏗ (digadutlvdi)
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 眼罩 (zh) (yǎnzhào) - Danish: bind for øjnene
- Dutch: blinddoek (nl)
- Esperanto: okulkovro
- Finnish: silmäside, sokkoliina (fi)
- French: bandeau (fr) m (sur les yeux)
- Galician: venda (gl) f
- German: Augenbinde (de) f
- Indonesian: penutup mata
- Italian: benda (it), bendaggio m, bendatura f
- Japanese: アイマスク (ja) (aimasuku), 目隠し (ja) (めかくし, mekakushi)
- Korean: 안대(眼帶) (ko) (andae), 눈가리개 (nun'garigae)
- Portuguese: venda (pt) f
- Russian: повя́зка на глаза́ f (povjázka na glazá), повя́зка (ru) f (povjázka)
- Spanish: venda ocular f, antifaz (es) m
- Swedish: ögonbindel (sv) c
- Tagalog: piring
- Ukrainian: пов'я́зка на очі f (povʺjázka na oči)
- Welsh: mwgwd m
blindfold (not comparable)
- Having the eyes covered so as to obscure vision
- Thoughtless; reckless.
blindfold (not comparable)
- With the eyes covered so as to obscure vision.
- 1779, James Robertson, edited by John Sinclair, Statistical Account of Scotland, volume 11, page 620:
They put all the bits of cake into a bonnet. Every one, blind-fold, draws out a portion. - 1962 April, J. N. Faulkner, “Summer Saturday at Waterloo”, in Modern Railways, page 258:
The commuters from the suburbs come unencumbered with luggage, children and prams, and can almost be relied upon to find their way blindfold to their trains.
- 1779, James Robertson, edited by John Sinclair, Statistical Account of Scotland, volume 11, page 620:
- (figurative) Blindly; without due thought or caution.
blindfold (third-person singular simple present blindfolds, present participle blindfolding, simple past and past participle blindfolded)
- To cover the eyes, in order to make someone unable to see.
Children need to be blindfolded before they hit the piñata. - To obscure understanding or comprehension.
To obscure understanding or comprehension
- “blindfold”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.