fair hair in English

blond or light hai

Use "fair hair" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "fair hair" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "fair hair", or refer to the context using the word "fair hair" in the English Dictionary.

1. Her long fair hair had been shorn.

2. 8 My fair hair was meticulously parted.

3. Theirs are the children with very fair hair.

4. He had blue eyes and crinkly fair hair.

5. Her long fair hair was knotted and straggly.

6. She had fair hair, blue eyes and translucent skin.

7. What does Blond mean? Having fair hair and skin

8. A blur of fair hair, a delicate face, young.

9. 14 Her long fair hair was knotted and straggly.

10. He ran a hand through his mop of fair hair.

11. In his crinkly fair hair there was hardly any grey.

12. Blonde (plural Blondes) Alternative form of blond (person of fair hair)

13. That faint reddish tinge in his fair hair - did you notice that?

14. He had very fine, fair hair and pale skin, faintly pitted by smallpox.

15. 29 She's got long fair hair but she's got a veil over it.

16. He had a long pale face, fashionably spiky fair hair and a pleasant smile.

17. 21 She had blue eyes and fair hair pulled back under her starched cap.

18. Usage: Blondeis still widely used for the noun specifying a woman or girl with fair hair

19. Flat-chested, narrow-hipped, her fair hair sleek from swimming, she looked like an impish boy.

20. Usage: Blonde is still widely used for the noun specifying a woman or girl with fair hair.

21. She was dressed in trousers and a trenchcoat and had a mane of fair hair beneath a tight-fitting beret.

22. Lynn had a round face with freckles and brown eyes and she wore her fair hair in a thick plait.

23. 22 She was dressed in trousers and a trenchcoat and had a mane of fair hair beneath a tight-fitting beret.

24. 23 She was dressed in trousers and a trenchcoat and had a mane of fair hair beneath a tight-fitting beret.

25. So you can either say, “She is Blonde," or “She is a Blonde,” and they mean the same thing — that she has fair hair.

26. The less common variant Blond occurs usually as an adjective, occasionally as a noun, and is the preferred form when referring to men with fair hair

27. The flakes of snow covered her long fair hair , which fell in beautiful curls around her neck ; but of that , of course , she never once now thought .