0 A blinkered person is unable or unwilling to understand other people's beliefs, and blinkered opinions or ways of behaving show someone is unable or unwilling to understand other people: --
He's very blinkered in his outlook.
He has not been constricted by the language of the civil service and has not taken a narrow and blinkered view.
It is not, therefore, such an inflexible, blinkered policy as might be imagined at first glance.
It is relatively easy for them to be blinkered when looking at a house.
Morley was a fitting focus for the celebrations, having welcomed him onto the staff in 1942 after more august, and blinkered, institutions had shown no interest.
Fairfax's careful selection and shaping of copious quotations from primary sources should convince all but the most blinkered reader that this period's dances and dancers were anything but primitive.
They dismissed as cheap any reconceptualization talk that appeared in the policy discourse and rededicated their blinkered focus to examinations of the 'real' payoffs.
It has to be, so that its lessons and recommendations sink in to the dim or blinkered consciousness of politicians with the authority to make a material response.
Bushnell stressed the limitations of religious language and, in particular, the dangers of a blinkered dogmatic terminology.