blonde
adjective/blɒnd/
/blɑːnd/
(also blond)
In British English it is usual to spell this word blonde when writing about a woman or girl and blond when writing about a man or boy, although the spelling blonde is sometimes used for men and boys too. In American English the spelling blond is often preferred for either sex. Blonde may be used to describe a woman’s hair, but many people dislike the noun ‘a blonde’ as a way of referring to a woman, as it suggests the most important thing about her is her hair colour and is often used to imply a stereotype (= a fixed but not accurate idea) that blonde women are stupid.金黄色的 - She had long blonde hair.
她有一头金色长发。 - The child had short blond curls and large blue eyes.
这个孩子有一头金色的短卷发和蓝色的大眼睛。
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs- be
- look
- go
- …
- very
- quite
- ash
- dark
- dirty
- …
- She had long blonde hair.
头发金黄的 - a small, blond boy
一个金发小男孩 - A blonde-haired girl walked in.
一名金发少女走了进来。
- a small, blond boy
Word Originlate 17th cent. (earlier as blond): from French, feminine of blond, from medieval Latin blundus ‘yellow’, perhaps from Germanic.
Wordfinder
- auburn
- blonde
- dark
- fair
- ginger
- grey
- jet black
- mousy
- redhead
- sandy