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blonde
[blond]
adjective
(of a woman or girl) having fair hair and usually fair skin and light eyes.
noun
a woman or girl having this coloration.
blonde
/ ɒԻ /
adjective
(of women's hair) of a light colour; fair
(of a person, people or a race) having fair hair, a light complexion, and, typically, blue or grey eyes
(of soft furnishings, wood, etc) light in colour
noun
a person, esp a woman, having light-coloured hair and skin
Also called: blonde lace.a French pillow lace, originally of unbleached cream-coloured Chinese silk, later of bleached or black-dyed silk
Spelling Note
Other 51Թ Forms
- blondeness noun
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of blonde1
Example Sentences
But whether spectators were there to pay their respects to someone they admired or to gawk at the cortège for another one of Hollywood’s dead blondes is its own question.
That she was more than a pinup was not even then a secret — a Life magazine cover story at the time of “Rock Hunter” called her “Broadway’s smartest dumb blonde.”
A bleached blonde vista of windswept spikes, so famous that it earned a whole chapter in the singer's autobiography.
"He had a type and I was it: blonde hair and blue eyes," Robson told the BBC's The State of Us podcast.
One small modern-era update DeBlois has made to his script is that this Nordic hamlet has cut back on the number of blondes.
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When To Use
Blonde and blond are both adjectives most commonly used to describe the color of light or yellowish hair or someone who has such hair. They can also both be used as nouns referring to a person with such hair, as in Should I make this character a blond or a redhead? They are pronounced exactly the same. But there is a difference: the spelling blonde is typically used in a gender-specific way to refer to or describe women and girls with this hair color. In contrast, the use of blond in a gender-neutral way is very common. And when the word is used as an adjective, this spelling is much more commonly used, regardless of the gender of the person whose hair color is being described.Blond and blonde derive from French, which has grammatical gender, meaning that some words end differently depending on whether they are applied to men or women (with e being the feminine ending). This happens in a few other pairs of words in English, like confidant and confidante, though in many cases the term without the e has become largely gender-neutral. This is the case with blond, which is the more commonly used of the two.When describing the colors of things other than hair, such as wood or coffee, only the spelling blond is used.When in doubt, remember that the spelling blond is appropriate in all cases.Want to learn more? Read the full breakdown of the difference between blonde and blond.
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