blind-fly
English
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editNoun
editblind-fly (countable and uncountable, plural blind-flies)
- (countable) Any of several medium-sized blood-sucking flies, of the family Tabanidae, usually species in the genus Haematopota.
- 1961 June 8, Robert Barrass, New Scientist: The Visual Sense in "Blind-Flies"[2]:
- While the bite of a mosquito or a tsetse fly may not be noticed, the bite of a blind-fly is very painful. The female takes about five minutes to gorge itself with blood and when it leaves the host animal its abdomen is so distended that it must fly with difficulty. Once it has started to probe it can be killed or picked off with the fingers quite easily. It is perhaps because of this that the name blind fly came to be used for a fly which has large eyes and is by no means blind.
- (uncountable) The game of blind man's buff
- Possibly derived from the Italian name of the game: Mosca cieca, which literally means "blind fly".
- 1995, William Crooke, Natives of Northern India, →ISBN:
- Bengalis, like the Italians, call the name "Kana Machi, "Blind Fly", and, as with us, the blind man has to touch one of the players sitting round, and after feeling him, has to state his name.