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From the verb blur : (⇒ conjugate ) blurred is: ⓘClick the infinitive to see all available inflections v past v past p
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025 blur /blɜr/USA pronunciation
v., blurred, blur•ring, n. v.
to (cause to) become hard to see or hear: [ no object] Her eyes blurred with tears. His speech blurred the more he drank. [ ~ + object] The fog blurred the outline of the car.
to make a dirty mark or smear on (something):[ ~ + object] She blurred the ink on the letter with her tears.
to dull or weaken (a distinction between things that should be separate):[ ~ + object] blurred the distinction between true reform and total destruction.
n. [ countable * usually singular]
a smudge or smear that obscures:a blur of smoke.
something seen or remembered indistinctly:The ship was a blur on the horizon. Parts of the trip were just a blur.
blurred, adj.: old and blurred photos.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025 blur
(blûr),USA pronunciation v., blurred, blur•ring, n. v.t.
to obscure or sully (something) by smearing or with a smeary substance:The windows were blurred with soot.
to obscure by making confused in form or outline; make indistinct:The fog blurred the outline of the car.
to dim the perception or susceptibility of; make dull or insensible:The blow on the head blurred his senses.
v.i.
to become indistinct:Everything blurred as she ran.
to make blurs.
n.
a smudge or smear that obscures:a blur of smoke.
a blurred condition; indistinctness:They could see nothing in the foggy blur.
something seen indistinctly:The ship appeared as a blur against the horizon.
blur•red•ly
(blûr′ id lē, blûrd′ -),USA pronunciation adv.
blur′ red•ness , n.
blur′ ring•ly , adv.
2.See corresponding entry in Unabridged cloud, dim, darken, veil, mask.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
blur / blɜː / (blurs , blurring , blurred ) to make or become vague or less distinct : heat haze blurs the hills , education blurs class distinctions to smear or smudge (transitive ) to make (the judgment, memory, or perception) less clear; dim something vague, hazy, or indistinct a smear or smudge Etymology: 16th Century: perhaps variant of blear ˈblurred ˈblurry
'blurred ' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):