How To Use Blind spot In A Sentence

  • OTOH I’ve always been fascinated by the massive blind spot in multiculti and PC discourse which refuses to acknowledge the oppressive and discriminatory elements in many non western cultures. Cheeseburger Gothic » Drop your bombs between the minarets, down Geneva way-ay-ay-aaayyy…
  • But even Hymes has his blind spots.
  • The future is already potentially present in the shape of the blind spots and contradictions of the present - in its silences and exclusions, its conflicts and fragmentations.
  • It can be very dangerous if there's a vehicle in your blind spot.
  • Visual disturbances: these can precede the headache and common complaints include wavy lines, blind spots and flashing lights. Times, Sunday Times
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • The rear-view mirror helps to reduce blind spots on both sides of the car.
  • The prime minister has a blind spot on ethical issues.
  • Critics accuse him of having a blind spot on issues of ethics.
  • Visual disturbances: these can precede the headache and common complaints include wavy lines, blind spots and flashing lights. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have a blind spot where classic music is concerned.
  • It can be very dangerous if there's a vehicle in your blind spot.
  • It can be very dangerous if there's a vehicle in your blind spot.
  • I have a blind spot where jazz is concerned .
  • I have a blind spot where maths is concerned.
  • To help with blind spots the super lorry has two cameras showing either side of the vehicle. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was the blind spot of the internationalist Left.
  • Whiteley is no hagiographer - he can be coldly critical of his subject's blind spots and prejudices - and yet Banham's stature is enhanced rather than diminished by this study, which was no doubt the intention.
  • I have a blind spot where jazz is concerned .
  • I have a blind spot where classic music is concerned.
  • Motorists drive in the knowledge they have blind spots in their mirrors. Times, Sunday Times
  • She does exceptionally well in her teaching practice but she has a blind spot in essay writing. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have a blind spot where modern art is concerned.
  • The prime minister has a blind spot on ethical issues.
  • This implies that there is complicated (non-linear) summation of signals converging on to the cell from the retina surrounding the blind spot.
  • This is the idea that the world is just as we see it; that we are not hampered or constrained by preconceptions, biases and blind spots. Times, Sunday Times
  • The trouble was, Tweed was thinking, Paula had a blind spot where Dalby was concerned.
  • The cabs in these lorries tend to be high off the ground and have narrow windows with large blind spots. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have a blind spot where modern art is concerned.
  • While the ragtop is a bit slower to 60 mph (4.9 seconds, compared with 4.6 for the coupe) and a half-second more leisurely through the quarter-mile (13.4 seconds), the retracted top cures the low-roof coupe's biggest functional liability: massive rear-quarter blind spots and desperately limited outward visibility. A Genuine Ragtop Road Monster, Leaks and All
  • I allowed this job to begin without the right number of people, and I allowed a blind spot to develop on the port side of the aircraft.
  • I have a blind spot where jazz is concerned .
  • I have a blind spot where jazz is concerned .
  • He continually bailed out at the plate, shifting his head and neck in an effort to bypass the blind spot that he encountered when he tried to view baseballs head-on.
  • I have a blind spot where classic music is concerned.
  • All-round visibility is excellent, especially due to the large rear screen and two-part wing mirrors with blind spot adjustment.
  • In our view, the misdating of the Baptistery was not just a blind spot in an otherwise lucid vision of the past, a breakdown of rationality explained by local patriotism and rivalry with Rome's antiquity.
  • Never punish your horse for spooking. Instead, relax...and take a second to remember that he was born with a blind spot (and with many, many predators).
  • Visual - field defect: Blind spot ( scotoma ) or area in the normal field of vision.
  • Kino lay back against the wall of the cave, squinting, rubbing and focusing his eyes to get the blind spots out.
  • I have a blind spot where computers are concerned.
  • He addresses the claim that the blind spot is bad design, by pointing out that the blind spot occupies only 0. 25% of the visual field, and is far (15°) from the visual axis so that the visual acuity of the region is only about 15% of the foveola, the most sensitive area of the retina right on the visual axis. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • There is a blind spot in government about such public data businesses. Times, Sunday Times
  • The rear-view mirror helps to reduce blind spots on both sides of the car.
  • The prime minister has a blind spot on ethical issues.
  • All the viewer sees when standing in front of the work is the mirrors reflecting one another - or a blind spot.
  • The prime minister has a blind spot on ethical issues.
  • To help with blind spots the super lorry has two cameras showing either side of the vehicle. Times, Sunday Times
  • When I was single I never worried about money — it was a bit of a blind spot.
  • I have a blind spot where modern art is concerned.
  • She does exceptionally well in her teaching practice but she has a blind spot in essay writing. Times, Sunday Times
  • golf is one of his blind spots and he's proud of it
  • Even fairly consistent abidance in non-dual realization does not necessarily bring about more intimacy in their own lives, transform the difficult moments in their own relationships, make visible to themselves their blind spots or keep depression and anxiety at bay. Mariana Caplan, Ph.D.: A Humbling Perspective on Oneness: There Really Is No Other
  • There is a blind spot in government about such public data businesses. Times, Sunday Times
  • The wing mirrors flash an alert if a vehicle is in your blind spot and the satnav and entertainment system was brilliantly intuitive. The Sun
  • For such a clueful person, he has an interesting blind spot.
  • I have a blind spot where classic music is concerned.
  • I have a blind spot where computers are concerned.
  • The cabs in these lorries tend to be high off the ground and have narrow windows with large blind spots. Times, Sunday Times
  • The counter in custody is not a blind spot. on September 9, 2009 at 11: 09 am Anon Citizen Focus – meet the “customer”. « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • I have a blind spot where computers are concerned.
  • Critics accuse him of having a blind spot on issues of ethics.
  • There is a blind spot in government about such public data businesses. Times, Sunday Times
  • I both blind them with my beak nose and am their blind spot.
  • But the biggest blind spot is the inability of Bush and Evans to see that there are other perspectives on free trade.
  • To help with blind spots the super lorry has two cameras showing either side of the vehicle. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have a blind spot where classic music is concerned.
  • It would be nice to have all the functionality of the human eye without a blind spot.
  • I have a blind spot where modern art is concerned.
  • We hope that looking at Ugly laws, anti-Okie laws, and Jim Crow laws will give us the distance and perspective we need to illumine our own blind spots and democratic failings. Paul Boden: The Quality of Whose Life? Part 2
  • When I was single I never worried about money — it was a bit of a blind spot.
  • As Constabularies have so many layers of fat, broken blud vessels, fractured nerves, clogged arteries, blind spots, ears blocked, myopia between the action feet and the top noodle, it is amazing that anything gets done. IPCC To Investigate Barwell Deaths « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • But a blind spot around narcissistic vulnerability is perhaps the surest sign of extreme narcissistic vulnerability.
  • A binman who died after being run over by his own dustbin wagon might have stepped into a blind spot behind the vehicle, an inquest heard.
  • There is a blind spot in government about such public data businesses. Times, Sunday Times
  • Trident seems to occupy a blind spot for a Government otherwise over-enthusiastic about cutbacks in public expenditure.
  • The cabs in these lorries tend to be high off the ground and have narrow windows with large blind spots. Times, Sunday Times
  • The cabs in these lorries tend to be high off the ground and have narrow windows with large blind spots. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is a sort of blind spot. Times, Sunday Times
  • It can be very dangerous if there's a vehicle in your blind spot.
  • The prime minister has a blind spot on ethical issues.
  • To help with blind spots the super lorry has two cameras showing either side of the vehicle. Times, Sunday Times
  • While the ragtop is a bit slower to 60 mph (4.9 seconds, compared with 4.6 for the coupe) and a half-second more leisurely through the quarter-mile (13.4 seconds), the retracted top cures the low-roof coupe's biggest functional liability: massive rear-quarter blind spots and desperately limited outward visibility. A Genuine Ragtop Road Monster, Leaks and All
  • Finlayson spent fifteen minutes teaching Tribe the signals, and describing the blind spots of enemy aircraft.
  • The neurological term for this is scotoma, which is Greek for “blind spot.” The Answer
  • If left alone, my blind spots become hardened personality traits. Christianity Today
  • Like all industry chiefs, Oxburgh has a blind spot that conveniently overlooks how state-corporate power is relentlessly feeding a suicidal system of globalisation.
  • I installed the European-style blind-spot mirror, which is aspheric, and I do not have a blind spot anymore. A Hatchback With Some Punch
  • Perhaps alterity has become such a blind spot in historicism generally because it simultaneously serves as a proxy for "accuracy" and self-consciousness. The Uses and Abuses of Historicism: Halperin and Shelley on the Otherness of Ancient Greek Sexuality
  • I didn't see the car that was overtaking me it was in my blind spot.
  • We had a little bit of a blind spot in that we always thought that smartness was fungible into whatever needed to be done, because a few of our early employees were like that.
  • There are persistent blind spots that many reviewers of his work have noted over the past two decades. The Times Literary Supplement
  • And, none of us expect him to be loving -- she has a massive blind spot for the wee scunner -- but man, is he ungracious. The WritingYA Weblog: TBR3: A Tale of Two Cities - Wheels Within Wheels
  • When I was single I never worried about money — it was a bit of a blind spot.
  • As with the Plus 8, the rear-view mirror stuck in the middle of the windscreen causes an awkward blind spot, which combined with the wiper makes it difficult to see the nearside wing.
  • This is where failure becomes a matter of not mapping enough of yourself to the story, I think, where those absences and blind spots paradoxically function as negative spaces which continue to define the story largely in terms of your personal psychology, the disacknowledged aspects of it. Archive 2006-09-01
  • There is a sort of blind spot. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has a blind spot , where modern art is concerned.
  • I am quite good at English, but I have a bit of a blind spot where spelling is concerned.
  • We should note in closing that high tech as a sector has a blind spot here. LIVING ON THE FAULT LINE, REVISED EDITION
  • The wing mirrors flash an alert if a vehicle is in your blind spot and the satnav and entertainment system was brilliantly intuitive. The Sun
  • The Superb was certainly quiet on the move, with virtually no noise intrusion even at high motorway speeds, and for such a big car, all-round visibility is excellent with few blind spots.
  • There is a sort of blind spot. Times, Sunday Times
  • History is one of his blind spots.
  • Finlayson spent fifteen minutes teaching Tribe the signals, and describing the blind spots of enemy aircraft.
  • There is a sort of blind spot. Times, Sunday Times
  • He stands up for Poivre by Caron, despite a "prickly, clovy, tacky-varnishy, old-upholsteryish, neglected card-catalogue dryness," since "love has its blind spots" and he wears it. James Warren: This Week in Magazines: Tone Deaf Republicans, Rock Stars, and Subprime Wolves
  • I didn't see the car that was overtaking me it was in my blind spot.
  • I have a blind spot where maths is concerned.
  • If only they didn't create so many blind spots for the unsuspecting motorist.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy