The adjective for "blind" in French is "aveugle". It can also be used as a noun: "un aveugle", meaning "a blind person".
Blind trust is translated 'confiance aveugle' in French.
"Comment s'est passé le blind date?" In French, the English phrase for "blind date" is commonly used, but one could say "un rendez-vous arrangé" instead.
Louis Braille
Braille, invented by Louis Braille (a blind Frenchman)
A system of printing or writing for the blind in which the characters are represented by tangible points or dots. It was invented by Louis Braille, a French teacher of the blind.
Braille, invented by Louis Braille (a blind Frenchman)
Charles Hunter
"Trois souris aveugles."
When the two blind passengers shared their stories, the cosmopolitan passenger translated the Greek's stories into French for the French passenger, and the French passenger was grateful for the translation.
Louis Braille, a French inventor born in 1809, created a system of raised dots arranged in cells to enable people who are blind or visually impaired to read and write. This system, known as braille, revolutionized communication and access to information for individuals with visual disabilities.
Etimologically, Cecile means "Blind", from the latin word caecus. In Antiquity, blindness characterized the soothsayers.Cecile is the Saint patron of musicians and instrument makers and is celebrated on November 22nd.
Louis Braille, a French educator who was himself blind, developed the reading and writing system known as braille in the early 19th century. This system uses raised dots to represent letters, allowing blind individuals to read through touch.