Blinked vs Blinded - What's the difference?
blinked | blinded |
(blink)
To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
To flash headlights on a car at.
To send a signal with a lighting device.
To flash on and off at regular intervals.
(hyperbole) To perform the smallest action that could solicit a response.
* 1980 , Billy Joel, “Don't Ask Me Why”, Glass Houses , Columbia Records
To shut out of sight; to evade; to shirk.
(Scotland) To trick; to deceive.
To wink; to twinkle with, or as with, the eye.
* Alexander Pope
To see with the eyes half shut, or indistinctly and with frequent winking, as a person with weak eyes.
* Shakespeare
To shine, especially with intermittent light; to twinkle; to flicker; to glimmer, as a lamp.
* Wordsworth
* Sir Walter Scott
To turn slightly sour, or blinky, as beer, milk, etc.
(label) To teleport, mostly for short distances
The act of very quickly closing both eyes and opening them again.
(figuratively) The time needed to close and reopen one's eyes.
(computing) A text formatting feature that causes text to disappear and reappear as a form of visual emphasis.
* 2007 , Cheryl D. Wise, Foundations of Microsoft Expression Web: The Basics and Beyond (page 150)
A glimpse or glance.
* Bishop Hall
(UK, dialect) gleam; glimmer; sparkle
* Wordsworth
(nautical) The dazzling whiteness about the horizon caused by the reflection of light from fields of ice at sea; iceblink
(sports, in the plural) Boughs cast where deer are to pass, in order to turn or check them.
(label) An ability that allows teleporting, mostly for short distances
(blind)
(of a bus) to display a particular destination or route number on the .
As verbs the difference between blinked and blinded
is that blinked is past tense of blink while blinded is past tense of blind.As an adjective blinded is
to display a particular destination or route number on the blinds.blinked
English
Verb
(head)blink
English
Verb
- The loser in the staring game is the person who blinks first.
- An urban legend claims that gang members will attack anyone who blinks them.
- Don't come to the door until I blink twice.
- The blinking text on the screen was distracting.
- All the waiters in your grand cafe / Leave their tables when you blink .
- to blink the question
- (Jamieson)
- One eye was blinking , and one leg was lame.
- Show me thy chink, to blink through with mine eyne.
- The dew was falling fast, the stars began to blink .
- The sun blinked fair on pool and stream.
Noun
(en noun)- I can think of no good reason to use blink because blinking text and images are annoying, they mark the creator as an amateur, and they have poor browser support.
- This is the first blink that ever I had of him.
- Not a blink of light was there.
- (Sir Walter Scott)
blinded
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(-)- The bus was blinded for route 100 to the city centre.
