Typically, 'blonde' is reserved for women or girls. Both are correct spellings, though.
When using the word as a noun, blond or blonde is gender specific. Blond is a male, but blonde is a female. When using the word as an adjective, it is always blond.
The feminine form is blonde, while the masculine form is blond.
Yes, it rhymes with pond. Blonde and blond are pronounced the same way. "Blonde" is a noun to describe a woman -- "Marilyn Monroe was a famous blonde." "Blond" is an adjective for either sex -- "Daniel Craig is the first blond Bond": "Marilyn Monroe was born brunette but dyed her hair blond."
"Blonde et légale" (Blond and legal) is the official translation. The litteral translation would be "Légalement blonde".
Dizzy is the one to go with. People can be ditzy, but when it comes to using it with a blonde, you go with dizzy. In this usage dizzy means lacking seriousness; given to frivolity. "A dizzy blonde."
There are separate spellings by gender : males are blondand females are blonde.
'Blondey' is spelled 'Blonde' and 'Blond' is spelled 'Blond'.
Actually you have it , Blond is the french word meaning fair or light colored. Our English version is spelled Blonde and is taken directly from the french word.
The female version, blonde is "rubia." "Blonde" in Spanish is "rubio" or "rubia" where rubio is male (blond) and rubia female (blonde).
The feminine form is blonde, while the masculine form is blond.
Blond": refers to as the color, whether it is blond hair or blond paper eg. The man has blond hair. Blonde": is used as a noun for a woman or girl with blond hair; sometimes used in a sexist way or slang terms eg. That blonde is beautiful.
The word blonde can be a noun (blonde-haired female) or an adjective meaning of a light color (referring to women or hair). When referring to a male person, the noun and adjective is blond.
blond = rubioblonde = rubia
blond-haired (feminine)
Yes, it rhymes with pond. Blonde and blond are pronounced the same way. "Blonde" is a noun to describe a woman -- "Marilyn Monroe was a famous blonde." "Blond" is an adjective for either sex -- "Daniel Craig is the first blond Bond": "Marilyn Monroe was born brunette but dyed her hair blond."
Yes.
Yes, blonde is a closed syllable word.
blond = blondíni (×‘×œ×•× ×“×™× ×™) blonde = blondínit (×‘×œ×•× ×“×™× ×™×ª)