blind drunk
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
blind/blʌɪnd/
▶adjective
- 1 unable to see because of injury, disease, or a congenital condition.
- 2 done without being able to see or without certain information.
■ (of flying) using instruments only.
- 3 lacking perception, judgement, or reason: they were blind to his potential.
- 4 concealed, closed, or blocked off.
■ (of a corner or bend) impossible to see round.
- 5 (of a plant) without buds, eyes, or terminal flowers.
- 6 informal the slightest: it didn't do a blind bit of good.
- 1 cause (someone) to be unable to see.
- 2 deprive of understanding or judgement.
■ (blind someone with) confuse or overawe someone with (something they do not understand).
- 3 Brit. informal, dated move very fast and dangerously.
- 1 a screen for a window, especially one on a roller or made of slats.
■ Brit. an awning over a shop window.
- 2 something designed to conceal one's real intentions.
- 3 N. Amer. a hide, as used by hunters.
- 4 Brit. informal, dated a heavy drinking bout.
– phrases
bake something blind bake a pastry case without a filling.
(as) blind as a bat informal having very bad eyesight.
blind drunk informal extremely drunk.
turn a blind eye pretend not to notice. [said to be in allusion to Nelson, who lifted a telescope to his blind eye at the Battle of Copenhagen (1801), thus not seeing the signal to ‘discontinue the action’.]
bake something blind bake a pastry case without a filling.
(as) blind as a bat informal having very bad eyesight.
blind drunk informal extremely drunk.
turn a blind eye pretend not to notice. [said to be in allusion to Nelson, who lifted a telescope to his blind eye at the Battle of Copenhagen (1801), thus not seeing the signal to ‘discontinue the action’.]
– derivatives
blindly adverb,
blindness noun.
blindly adverb,
blindness noun.
– origin OE, of Gmc origin.
'blind drunk' also found in these Oxford entries:

