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blinkered造句
(1) They've got a very blinkered view of life. (2) He's very blinkered in his outlook. (3) Haig was limited by his blinkered approach to strategy and tactics. (4) Everybody outside the financially secure, self-serving and blinkered Cabinet. (5) But not, as the blinkered writer of that article implied, necessarily her own independent choice. (6) We should not be quite so narrow-minded, blinkered and xenophobic about the rest of the world. (7) One reason is that probabilism blinkered their vision. (8) "He grasped the meaning of a blinkered youth"( Benjamin DeMott )"The characters have a blinkered view and, misinterpreting what they see, sometimes take totally inexpedient action"( Pauline Kael. (9) I am sometimes blinkered which makes both my lover and I very upset. (10) He seems to be so blinkered that he cannot see what is happening around him. (11) He thinks the talk is motivated by blinkered ideology, not a rational assessment of natural change. (12) Firenze had little patience for what he called "fortunetelling, " suggesting that to try to understand Divination in these terms was being "blinkered and fettered by the limitations" of being human. (13) Enmeshed in this physical world, our souls blinkered by limited horizons, we are susceptible to falsehood. (14) It grew ever more clear to everyone that the Minister was too reactionary, too blinkered. (15) Through our windshields we see road signs and tail-lights-technology has blinkered us. (16) This occurs not so much because the engineers are callous, but because of a blinkered approach by all parties. (17) Width often leads to superficiality and depth may produce a blinkered approach and an intellectual treadmill. (18) Humanity had begun to chart the universe and impose its own blinkered logic upon it. (19) Their class system was hidebound, their rulers unjustifiably smug, their attitude to rising talent blinkered. (20) They generally have personal bias in various degrees, such as laziness, blinkered peacockery, anxiety, depression, and self-abasement. (21) And this was the fifties, the grayest, bleakest, most blinkered and culturally repressive period in the entire second half of the twentieth century, especially in small-town America.