blind
英 [bla?nd]
美[bla?nd]
- adj. 盲目的;瞎的
- adv. 盲目地;看不見地
- n. 掩飾,借口;百葉窗
- vt. 使失明;使失去理智
- n. (Blind)人名;(法)布蘭;(德、瑞典)布林德
考試真題
- You may need to start by encouraging your current network to help you identify your blind spots.
出自-2015年12月閱讀原文
- It wasn't that Kodak was blind to the future, said Rebecca Henderson, a professor at Harvard Business School, but rather that it failed to execute on a strategy to confront it.
出自-2013年6月閱讀原文
- Its blind faith in traditional photography
出自-2013年6月閱讀原文
- You may need to start by encouraging your current network to help you identify your blind spots.
2015年12月四級(jí)真題(第二套)閱讀 Section C
- Protecting the union demand sacrifices those students, in effect turning a blind eye to the injustice in the education system.
出自-2016年6月閱讀原文
- He lived in a time when the blind couldn't get much education.
2015年高考英語重慶卷 閱讀理解 閱讀A 原文
- Instead, he invented a reading system of raised dots點(diǎn), which opened up a whole new world of knowledge to the blind.
2015年高考英語重慶卷 閱讀理解 閱讀A 原文
- It was about a blind person, Louis Braille.
2015年高考英語重慶卷 閱讀理解 閱讀A 原文
- People tend to be blind to the beauty around them.
2018年高考英語天津卷 閱讀理解 閱讀B 選項(xiàng)