WordNet
n. a street corner that you cannot see around as you are driving
Wikipedia
Blind Corner (U.S. Man in the Dark) is a 1963 British thriller film, directed by Lance Comfort and starring William Sylvester and Barbara Shelley. It also features popular singer of the time Ronnie Carroll playing himself.
The film is a tale of a cold, mercenary and scheming wife finally getting her comeuppance and was publicised with the tagline: "She loved one man for kicks...one man for luxury...one man for murder". The Time Out Film Guide describes it as "an unassuming but occasionally effective second-feature thriller."
Usage examples of "blind corner".
A moment of straight road and he managed to jerk the gear lever into low as he hurtled into another blind corner, the engine howling now.
And flux just straightened out, even when he knew she was Operating, even when he knew step by step what she was doing: even when he realized there had been deep-level tweaks that had prepared for this, even when he felt amazement that she did it from around a blind corner and improvising as she went.
He hadn't dared drive it over fifteen miles an hour, and even at fifteen he would have nightmare visions of being thrown over the handlebars and fracturing his skull or going around a blind corner and slamming into an overturned truck and going up in a fireball.
Not until his thoughts reached some blind corner and then lurched into a siding.