0 past simple and past participle of blind --
1 to make someone unable to see, permanently or for a short time: --
2 to make someone unable to notice or understand something: --
We shouldn't let our prejudices blind us to the facts of the situation.
Some methodologic characteristics, such as blinded randomization, appear to have a consistent effect upon the results of meta-analyses (3;30).
The assessor was not blinded to author, institution, or journal.
He also blinded his son, convinced he was implicated in the assassination attempt.
And if only she wasn't blinded by choice and left bewildered by the lack of artist information.
The gardener told the king that the ascetic he had had blinded had recovered his sight.
But take it also as a perhaps alarming tendency of the medical profession under the influence of commercialism to be epistemologically blinded by self-interest.
These randomised control trials were not blinded or placebo controlled.
A randomized, blinded, controlled trial investigating the gastrointestinal health effects of drinking water quality.