Blindheit
German > Latin
Blindheit, luminis caecitas, gew. bl. caecitas (eig.). – oculorum caligo (der Zustand, wo es einem dunkel vor den Augen ist). – lucis desiderium (der Zustand, wo man das Augenlicht vermißt). – mentis od. animi caecitas. animi acies obtusior. mentis caligo. tenebrae (B. des Geistes, Dummheit). – B. des Schicksals, fortunae temeritas. – B. für etw., caecitas alcis rei od. ad alqd – o über die B.! (d. i. über den blinden, dummen Menschen) o tenebrae!: mit B. schlagen, caecitate percutere (Eccl.); vgl. blenden no. I u. II: mit B. geschlagen sein, caecum, occaecatum esse (eig. u. uneig.); quod ante pedes est, non videre (uneig., Cic. Tusc. 5, 114): o daß ich mit B. geschlagen wäre! vellem oculos non habere!
Translations
blindness
Arabic: عَمًى; Armenian: կուրություն; Aromanian: urbari, urbeatsã; Asturian: ceguera; Belarusian: слепата; Bengali: অন্ধত্ব; Bulgarian: слепота; Catalan: ceguesa; Chichewa: khungu; Chinese Mandarin: 盲目性; Czech: slepota; Danish: blindhed; Dutch: blindheid; Esperanto: blindeco; Estonian: pimedus; Faroese: blindleiki, blindi, blindni; Finnish: sokeus; French: cécité; Galician: cegueira; Georgian: სიბრმავე, უსინათლობა; German: Blindheit; Greek: τύφλωση, τυφλότητα; Ancient Greek: ἀβλεψία, ἀθεησίη, ἀορασία, ἕλκος ἀλαόν, πάθη τῶν ὀφθαλμῶν, πήρωσις, πώρωσις, σκότος, τυφλότης, τύφλωσις; Hebrew: עיוורון; Hindi: अन्धता; Hungarian: vakság; Irish: daille; Italian: cecità; Japanese: 盲目; Kalmyk: бала; Khmer: ភាពពិការភ្នែក, ភាពខ្វាក់; Korean: 장님; Kurdish Central Kurdish: کوێری, kwêrî; Northern Kurdish: korî, korahî; Latin: caecitas; Macedonian: слепило; Malayalam: അന്ധത; Mongolian: сохор; Norwegian Bokmål: blindhet; Nynorsk: blindskap; Persian: نابینایی; Polish: ślepota; Portuguese: cegueira; Romanian: orbire; Russian: слепота; Scottish Gaelic: doille; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: слепило / сљепило, слепоћа / сљепоћа; Roman: slepilo / sljepilo, slepoća / sljepoća; Slovak: slepota; Slovene: slepota; Spanish: ceguera; Swahili: upofu; Swedish: blindhet; Telugu: అంధత్వము, గుడ్డితనం; Turkish: körlük; Turkmen: körlük; Ukrainian: сліпота