Need another word that means the same as “turning a blind eye”? Find 30 related words for “turning a blind eye” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
Associations of "Turning a blind eye" (30 Words)
askance | Directed to one side with or as if with doubt or suspicion or envy- Elizabeth Bowen. Her eyes with their misted askance look. |
behold | See or observe (someone or something, especially of remarkable or impressive nature. Behold Christ. |
binoculars | An optical instrument designed for simultaneous use by both eyes. |
blindly | Without preparation or reflection; without a rational basis. She began groping blindly in the dark. |
blink | Try to control or prevent tears by blinking. Out on the marshes there was a blink of light. |
blinking | Used to express annoyance. I ll sign off however I blinking well like. |
chauvinism | Activity indicative of belief in the superiority of men over women. There is very little national chauvinism in the country today. |
crippled | Severely damaged or malfunctioning. His rule left the country with a crippled economy. |
eyelid | Each of the upper and lower folds of skin which cover the eye when closed. |
eyesight | A person’s ability to see. Poor eyesight ended his plans for a naval career. |
flicker | Shine unsteadily. Amusement flickered briefly in his eyes. |
gaze | (in literary theory) a particular perspective considered as embodying certain aspects of the relationship between observer and observed. Offices screened from the public gaze. |
leer | Look or gaze in a lascivious or unpleasant way. Bystanders were leering at the nude painting. |
macroscopic | Large enough to be visible with the naked eye. |
ocular | Visible- Shakespeare. Ocular inspection. |
oculist | A medical doctor specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases of the eye. He visited an oculist in Chicago who prescribed a pair of reading glasses. |
optic | A lens or other optical component in an optical instrument. The optic or optical axis of the eye. |
seeing | The action of seeing someone or something. He had given the seeing as fair. |
shortsightedness | (ophthalmology) eyesight abnormality resulting from the eye’s faulty refractive ability; distant objects appear blurred. |
sidelong | Directed to or from one side. Darting eyes looking sidelong out of a wizened face. |
sight | Adjust the sight of a firearm or optical instrument. She offered to show me the sights. |
sightless | Invisible. Blank sightless eyes. |
squint | Be cross eyed have a squint or strabismus. The bright sun made them squint. |
stare | Fixate one’s eyes. He looked away pretending to stare out of the window. |
telescopic | Capable of viewing and magnifying distant objects. A telescopic umbrella. |
unnamed | Being or having an unknown or unnamed source. An unnamed donor. |
vision | The images seen on a television screen. He had a vision of the Virgin Mary. |
visual | Visible. Visual navigation. |
watch | See or watch. He told me my telephones were tapped and that I was being watched. |
wink | An act of winking. The diamond on her finger winked in the moonlight. |