188blind
blind as a bat
If you say that someone is as blind as a bat, you mean that they cannot see very well.
Everyone knew that Mary Nolan had been blind as a bat for years -- she'd even suffered a damaging fall not so long ago, too.
Without my glasses I was blind as a bat.
the blind leading the blind
You can describe a situation as the blind leading the blind when the person in charge is just as incapable of doing the task as the person who they are meant to be helping or guiding.
If Cedric was going to work with Eric, it would be the blind leading the blind.
Their attempts to help the Third World poor were rather like the blind leading the blind.
This expression is sometimes varied by replacing `blind' with another adjective appropriate to the subject that is being talked about.
His work certainly shocked the critics at his 1976 exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art. One damned it as an example of `the banal leading the banal'.
fly blind
If someone is flying blind in a situation, they do not have anything to help or guide them.
We will be flying blind into a world we don't know anything about.
With billions of dollars at stake, the two weren't willing to boost their offer while they were flying blind.
swear blind
If someone swears blind that something is true, they insist that they are telling you the truth, even though you are not sure whether or not to believe them. This expression is used in British English; the American expression is swear up and down.
He had a reputation for being a bit of a philanderer but he swore blind that he met the right girl in me and said he wanted to settle down.
Ron Atkinson swears blind that he bears no grudges against Manchester United for sacking him, but the atmosphere at Villa Park reeked of vengeance last night.
|