/blɪnːd/
OriginFrom Old Swedish blinder, from Old Norse blindr, from Proto-Germanic *blindaz.
- blind; unable or failing to see
“Om man är blind så kan man inte se” — If you are blind, you cannot see
“Jag litade blint på honom” — I trusted him blindly
“Jag var blind för vad som pågick” — I was blind to what was going on
- blind; closed at one end; having a dead end; exitless
“ett blint rör” — a dead-end pipe
Formsblindare(comparative) · blindast(superlative) · blind(error-unrecognized-form, indefinite, positive) · blindare(comparative, error-unrecognized-form, indefinite) · blindast(error-unrecognized-form, indefinite, superlative) · blint(indefinite, neuter, positive, singular) · blindare(comparative, indefinite, neuter, singular) · blindast(indefinite, neuter, singular, superlative) · blinda(indefinite, plural, positive) · blindare(comparative, indefinite, plural) · blindast(indefinite, plural, superlative) · blinde(archaic, indefinite, masculine, plural, positive) · blindare(archaic, comparative, indefinite, masculine, plural) · blindast(archaic, indefinite, masculine, plural, superlative) · blinde(definite, masculine, positive, singular) · blindare(comparative, definite, masculine, singular) · blindaste(definite, masculine, singular, superlative) · blinda(definite, error-unrecognized-form, positive) · blindare(comparative, definite, error-unrecognized-form) · blindaste(definite, error-unrecognized-form, superlative)