Blin
Origin 1
From Middle English blinnen, from Old English blinnan ("to stop, cease"), from Proto-Germanic *bilinnanÄ… ("to turn aside, swerve from"), from Proto-Indo-European *ley-, *leya- ("to deflect, turn away, vanish, slip"), equivalent to - + lin. Cognate with Old High German bilinnan ("to yield, stop, forlet, give away"), Old Norse linna (Swedish dialectal linna, "to pause, rest").
Full definition of blin
Verb
- (obsolete) To cease from.
- 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, III.v:nathemore for that spectacle bad,
Did th'other two their cruell vengeaunce blin .... - (archaic or dialectal) To stop, desist; to cease to move, run, flow, etc., let up.
- 1880, Margaret Ann Courtney, English Dialect Society, Glossary of words in use in Cornwall:A child may cry for half an hour, and never blin ; it may rain all day, and never blin ; the train ran 100 miles, and never blinned.
- 1908, John Masefield, A sailor's garland:Thus blinned their boast, as we well ken