English

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Etymology

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References sandblind ("partially blind", alteration of samblind), and stone dead ("unquestionably dead").

Adjective

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stone-blind (not comparable)

  1. Completely blind.
    • 1915, William Campbell, Sketches from Formosa, Marshall Brothers Limited, page 82:
      While recently addressing a large open-air audience in the district city itself, a man came forward and warmly invited me to dine with him. On inquiry, it turned out that he had formerly been stone-blind, but had been completely restored to sight by a simple operation at the hospital. Now, here was a man who would speak well of us, at all hazard ; and who, as a matter of fact, came home to his friends to tell them how great things the Lord had done for him.
    • 1942 October 3, John Ware, “Nomenclature of Night Blindness”, in British Medical Journal, volume 2, number 4265, →PMID, page 409:
      A deaf man may be anything from hard of hearing to as deaf as a post; a blind man may be as blind as a bat or an owl; he may be gravel-blind or stone-blind; a bald man as bald as a coot or as a billiard ball.
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