exsops. ab oculīs (indeclinable) (Late Latin) blind 4th c. CE, Actus Vercellenses: […] iacentibus autem nobis solae illae viduae stabant, quae erant ab oculis...
From Late Latin ab oculīs. avogllo (feminine avoglla, masculine plural avogllos, feminine plural avoglles) (ORB, broad) blind one-eyed borgno aveugle...
From Old French avogle, from Late Latin ab oculis (“without eyes”). aveugl'ye m or f (Jersey) blind aveugliément (“blindly; con”) aveuglier (“to blind”)...
aveugle, avuegle From Late Latin ab oculīs (“blind”, literally “away from the eyes”). See French aveugle for more. avogle m (oblique and nominative feminine...
Inherited from Middle French aveugle from Old French avogle, from Late Latin ab oculīs (“without eyes”, literally “away from the eyes”), possibly a calque of...
term acquired the meaning “blind”, from a construction such as *orbus ab oculīs (“deprived of eyes”). ōrbus → Proto-Albanian: *u̯œrbana- Albanian: verbër...
deprive a person of his eyes: oculis privare aliquem to be blind: oculis captum esse (vid. sect. IV. 6., note auribus, oculis...) something presents itself...
adēmptum, quoniam, ut vim fierī vetārent, adsiduitāte eōrum et praesentium oculīs opus erat. […] and this is why the right of spending the night away was...
orbus (“orphaned, deprived”) (probably a clipping of the phrase orbus ab oculīs (“deprived of eyes”)), from Proto-Indo-European *h₃órbʰos (“orphan”)....
(“blind”), from the Old French avugle (“without eyes”), from Late Latin ab oculīs (“without eyes”, literally “away from the eyes”). The in- might be from...