"Blind" can be an adjective, verb, noun, or adverb: Adjective: Some blind people use white canes, and others have guide dogs. Verb: The flash of light will blind you for a few seconds. Noun: The small room had a single window with a Venetian blind. Adverb: The screens went blank, and the team was now working blind.
"Blind" can be an adjective, verb, noun, or adverb: Adjective: Some blind people use white canes, and others have guide dogs. Verb: The flash of light will blind you for a few seconds. Noun: The small room had a single window with a Venetian blind. Adverb: The screens went blank, and the team was now working blind.
The abstract noun for the adjective blind is blindness. The word blind is also a verb (blind, blinds, blinding, blinded) and a concrete noun.
well there are past tense options for "are" such as...werewaslike instead of "Are yougoing to that movie, Blind Sight?it could be "Were you going to go to that movie, Blind Sight?
Blind is an adjective.Blind is also a verb. It has the meaning: to cause (someone) to be unable to see.It is a regular verb so the past and past article are both blinded.She was blinded by the explosion. (past participle)The attackers blinded him with acid. (past simple)When she went outside she was blinded by the sun. (past participle)
The Blind Leading the Blind was created in 1568.
yes the five blind boys of Mississippi was born blind
He was born blind
NO he wasn't born blind.
No there ways of becoming blind.
He apologised to the blind man.The pilots were flying blind in the thick fog.Helen Keller was deaf and blind.
If totaly blind, then no. If partially or nearly blind it will probably make them totally blind.