turn a blind eye

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To deliberately or knowingly ignore, overlook, or refuse to acknowledge something, especially when improper or unpleasant; to look the other way.

Pronunciation

tûrn′ ə blīnd′ ī′ tûrn′ ā′- /ˈtɜːn ə ˌblaɪ̯nd ˈaɪ̯/ /ˈtɜːn ˌeɪ̯-/ /ˈtɜɹn ə ˌblaɪ̯nd ˈaɪ̯/ /ˈtɜɹn ˌeɪ̯-/ /ˈtɜɹn ə ˌblʌɪ̯nd ˈʌɪ̯/ /ˈtɜːn ə ˌblɑe̯nd ˈɑe̯/ /ˈtɜːn ˌæɪ̯-/ En-au-turn a blind eye.ogg /ˈtøːn ə ˌblaɪ̯nd ˈaɪ̯/ /ˈtøːn ˌæɪ̯-/ /ˈtʌɹn ə ˌblaɪ̯nd ˈaɪ̯/ /ˈtʌɹn ə ˌblʌi̯nd ˈʌi̯/ /ˈtʌɹn ə ˌbləi̯nd ˈəi̯/ /ˈtʌɹn ˌe-/ /ˈʈəːʳn a ˌblajnɖ ˈaj/ /ˈʈəːʳn ˌeː-/

Word forms

turn a blind eye turns a blind eye turning a blind eye turned a blind eye turn the blind eye

Etymology

Probably from the idea of a person turning to look at something but not seeing it, as if their eyes are blind. The term is frequently claimed to originate from an incident during the First Battle of Copenhagen on 2 April 1801, when Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson (1758–1805) was ordered by Admiral Hyde Parker (1739–1807) through signal flags to discontinue naval action against a force of the Dano-Norwegian Navy. Nelson, who had been blinded in one eye early in his career, said to his flag captain Thomas Foley (1757–1833), “You know, Foley, I have only one eye—I have a right to be blind sometimes.” He then put his telescope to his blind eye and, remarking “I really do not see the signal,” continued the assault which ended in a British victory. However, this is not the source of the term as the Oxford English Dictionary records uses dating to the 17th and 18th centuries.

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