Word for hair colour

blonde — pale, yellow hair.

Synonyms: flaxen hair, platinum hair (very light blonde), fair hair, light hair.

peroxide blonde — very light blonde hair that has been bleached.

Famous peroxide blondes include Marilyn Monroe, Princess Diana, and Madonna.

Synonyms: bottle blonde, bleached blonde.

strawberry blonde — pale yellow hair with a hint of ginger.

Synonym: gingery blonde.

golden blonde — light brown hair with golden highlights.

Synonyms: dark blonde, honey blonde, sun kissed.

mousy — drab, mid brown hair.

Mousy is a slightly negative word to describe hair. Mid-brown is more diplomatic!

ash brown — light to mid brown hair, with cool tones.

red — hair that is orange.

A person with orange hair is a redhead.

Synonyms: ginger hair (bright red), sandy hair (soft red), auburn hair (dark red), carrot-top (mildly impolite).

brunette — dark brown hair.

Synonyms: chestnut, tawny, chocolate (brown).

jet black — very dark hair.

Synonyms: raven haired, ebony.

salt and pepper — an even sprinkling of grey and dark hair.

Synonyms: greying, going grey, turning grey.

silver fox — an attractive person with grey hair.

Mainly used to describe older men who have aged well, and kept their good looks.

Examples: George Clooney, Anderson Cooper.

bleached — hair that has been lightened (bleached) by one or more shades.

Lightening is a permanent method of changing your hair colour.

dyed — hair that has been changed to a different shade.

Synonyms: coloured, tinted. Semi-permanent and temporary hair colours (or rinses) wash out. Permanent hair colours need to grow out.

highlights (plural, noun) — strands of hair that have been bleached, to make hair look lighter.

Synonyms: streaks, foils.

lowlights (plural, noun) — strands of hair that have been tinted a darker colour.

Synonyms: streaks, foils.

Differences in Spelling — UK vs US English

British English: grey, colour

American English: gray, color

English Words For Hair Colour

Today’s English podcast lesson we will talk about the English words used to describe the colour of your hair. We often discuss the colour of your hair when describing what a person looks like.

Examples of describing a person might be: “He’s got blue eyes and flame red hair.” or «She has coal black hair with brown eyes.” However, there are some English words we use which we only ever use when talking about hair colour.

This is a lesson that should interest most people, most of us have hair. Not all of us though! I read a research study that found that 20% of men are bald by age 20, 40% are bald by the age of 40. The research paper also found that few women go bald, and now that I think about it I cannot think of a single bald woman that I know.

I hope you find this lesson interesting and don’t forget to listen to it several times until you are comfortable with all the words being used without having to look them up.

Most Unusual Words:

mousey
stepchild
recap

Most common 2 word phrases:

Phrase Count
hair is 11
hair colour 8
blonde hair 7
your hair 7
of hair 6

Listen To The Audio Lesson Now

The mp3 audio and pdf transcript for this lesson is now part of the Adept English back catalogue . You can still download and listen to this lesson as part of one of our podcast bundles.

Transcript: English Words For Hair Colour

Hi there and welcome to this short podcast from Adept English. I hope you’re finding our podcasts useful and that they’re helping you to improve your English, but I hope also that you’re finding them interesting. You don’t need to understand and remember and learn every word that you meet in the podcasts, but I aim to introduce a few words into the podcasts, which might be a little more difficult.

So most of the words I use, you’ll already know, but I also include some more specialised or more difficult ones each time. Then you can keep on increasing your vocabulary. Sometimes I do topics which are hopefully interesting in their own right – things that you might listen to in your own language. And, then some of the time, I’m trying to help you more directly with vocabulary or with things that are difficult in English.

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Vocabulary for hair colour

So what about today we talk about hair colour? There are a number of words in English, which we use specifically for the colour of our hair. Some of these words are used of other things, as well as hair. And sometimes we use plain old ‘colour words’ to describe hair but at other times, some of the words are just used of hair colour, nothing else.

Black, white, silver, grey or gray hair

So of course, you can have black hair or white hair. That’s fairly simple – and those hair colours exist all around the world. So usually, if you have black hair, you’re born with it and then by the time you’re very old, it might be that your hair has turned completely white. Quite literally, every strand of hair is white. Now usually there’s a period of time in the middle, where your hair is a mixture of black and white. And in English, we just call that grey – or grey-haired. Notice that grey in UK English is spelt G-R-E-Y, whereas in US English, it’s G-R-A-Y? So we would say that someone has grey hair or maybe silver hair, if we’re being very nice and kind about it, that is.

Video

Lots of people cover up their grey hair by colouring it. Of course because grey hair is associated with being older. And in English we use phrases like ‘the grey pound’ — to mean economically, older people perhaps have more power to buy things, more money. We also might talk about ‘silver surfers’ — so people who are old, but who use the internet a lot. So those terms are related to hair colour. If you have a rather attractive older man with grey hair, we might in the UK call him, jokingly, ‘a silver fox’. Think about George Clooney or José Mourinho for the sort of look I’m talking about!

Blonde hair

Perhaps the most-used word, which is more or less only used of hair is blonde, spelt B-L-O-N-D-E. I say ‘more or less’ because you can have ‘blonde beer’ — but that’s the only other thing, I think. So if your hair is very light coloured, slightly yellow maybe, (thinking of Donald Trump there!) then we would say that you have blonde hair. (Or our own Boris Johnson, of course).

Some cultures and countries in the world have lots of people with blonde hair. Think about the Scandinavians, the Dutch and the Germans. And some countries and cultures have very few people with blonde hair. If it’s very white blonde, which clearly has ‘come out of a bottle’ as we say – think of Marilyn Monroe or Debbie Harry, if you know who she is – then we might say that is ‘peroxide blonde’. Peroxide is the chemical usually used to lighten hair. So peroxide blonde.

Ginger hair

In the UK, we have people who have what we call red, or ginger hair. Ginger hair is so-called after ginger, G-I-N-G-E-R that you use in cooking – like Ginger Spice of the Spice Girls! And what we call red hair or ginger hair is actually usually closer to orange, or shades of orange. People with this colour of hair are actually quite rare. They make up only 2% of the world’s population. But the highest percentage of ginger haired people are in Scotland, where they make up 13% of the population and Ireland where they’re 10% of the population. So it’s certainly not uncommon in the UK. But America, the US has the highest number of people with red hair in the world.

Brown, mousy brown, brunette and auburn and ‘strawberry blonde’

If your hair is brown – that’s fine, we just call it ‘brown’. But we might call it ‘mouse’ or ‘mousey-brown’. That means it’s a mid brown – just like the colour of a mouse. So a mouse is a little animal that supposedly likes cheese – think Mickey Mouse perhaps – or Jerry out of Tom & Jerry. Another word for brown hair would be ‘brunette’, B-R-U-N-E-T-T-E. But if your hair is somewhere in between brown and red, we might say that it’s ‘auburn hair’. And auburn spelt A-U-B-U-R-N.

And if you have blonde hair, but it’s got a reddish colour too, we might call it ‘strawberry blonde’, which I think is quite a nice name.

Everyone covered!

Clearly, it’s possible in 2019 to have whatever colour of hair you like! Students in particular like to experiment and having a period of being blue or pink or even green. It’s often part of the freedom. But usually we go back to our own colour – and the challenge for some is what to do with our grey hair!

Download The Podcast Audio & Transcript

Helpful recap on different colours of hair

So just to recap – we talked about black hair, white hair, grey hair or silver hair, We talked about blonde hair and strawberry blonde hair. And we also talked about brown hair and mousey hair and about brunette hair. We mentioned auburn hair. I think that’s pretty much everyone’s hair colour covered!

Goodbye

If you like what we’re doing on the podcasts, then go to our Courses page at adeptenglish.com and have a look at what we offer. If you buy our courses in a bundle – so both of them, Activate Your Listening and the 500 Words Course at the same time — you’ll pay less money and it’s really good value. A lot of listening to help you take your English language learning even further.

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Anyway, enough for now. Have a lovely day. Speak to you again soon. Goodbye.

PS: The “Red headed step child” As An Insult

Not that long ago, giving birth to a child with red hair could be a big problem when neither of the parents had red hair. People would look at the situation and consider the child to be illegitimate.

It was such a problem historically; it became an insult and looked down upon if your child had red hair with no explanation. It even resulted in the red-haired child not being accepted by a family or having, its birthrights denied. People started to use the term “Oh is the red-headed stepchild nobody wants!” i.e. someone with red-hair is undesirable!

This insult later evolved into being used to describe just about anything that nobody wanted. For example, in business you might hear someone say “That project is the red-haired stepchild nobody wants to associate with.”

It’s only recently with our understanding of how certain genes work has helped us explain the appearance and disappearance of red-haired children in families.

The gene for red hair is recessive, so a person needs two copies of that gene for it to show up in your child. That means even if both parents carry the gene, just one in four of their children are likely to turn out to be a redhead. As a result, families that have no redheads for decades can suddenly discover a red-haired child in their midst.

Links

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/topics/personal-care/hair-colour/
https://thesaurus.yourdictionary.com/hair

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What are some descriptive words for Hair?

Here is a list of words that describe Hair color and styles.

Total number of Hair words and adjectives: 242 words

Hair color and styles words are listed in alphabetical order.

A Cascade Of Curls,
Afro,
Airy,
Auburn,
Balding,
Bangs,
Barrett,
Beautiful,
Beehive,
Big Hair,
Black,
Bleached,
Blonde,
Blow Dry,
Bob,
Bobby Pins,
Bonnet,
Bouffant,
Bouncy,
Bowl Cut,
Braids,
Bright,
Brown,
Brunette,
Brushed,
Bun,
Busby,
Bushy,
Buzz Cut,
Cap,
Carrot Top,
Chestnut,
Chignon,
Chocolate,
Choppy,
Cinnamon,
Clasps,
Clips,
Coiffure,
Comb Over,
Combs,
Copper,
Copper Red,
Corkscrews,
Cornrows,
Coronet,
Course,
Cowlick,
Crew Cut,
Crimped,
Crimper,
Cropped,
Crown,
Curlers,
Curling Iron,
Curls,
Curly,
Dandruff,
Dark,
Dark Chocolate,
Diffuser,
Dirty,
Dirty Blond,
Dirty Blonde,
Do,
Downy,
Dreadlocks,
Ducktail,
Dulled Gold,
Dyed,
Ebony,
Fair,
Fair-Haired,
Fall,
Faux-Hawk,
Feathered,
Fiery,
Finger Wave,
Flame Like,
Flaming Red,
Flattop,
Flaxen,
Flip,
Flowing,
Flowy,
Follicle,
Forelock,
French Knot,
French Twist,
Fringe,
Frizzy,
Frosted,
Fuzzy,
Gel,
Glisten,
Glossy,
Glowing,
Golden,
Golden Butterscotch,
Gorgeous,
Gossamer,
Greasy,
Grey,
Groomed,
Hairdo,
Hair Extensions,
Hairpiece,
Hairpins,
Hairspray,
Hanging,
Hard To Manage,
Hat,
Hat-Hair,
Headband,
Helmet,
Highlights,
Hi-Top,
Honey Blond,
Honey Blonde,
Hood,
Jet Black,
Jheri Curl,
Kinky,
Knotted,
Lackluster,
Layered,
Lock,
Long,
Loose,
Luscious,
Lustrous,
Mane,
Messy,
Miter,
Mohawk,
Mop,
Mousse,
Mud Gutter Blond,
Mud Like,
Mullet,
Nap,
Nappy,
Oily,
Onyx,
Out Of Control,
Pageboy,
Pale Champagne,
Part,
Peach Fuzz,
Pecan Blond,
Permanent,
Permed,
Pigtails,
Pin Straight,
Pixie,
Plait,
Platinum,
Pomade,
Pompadour,
Ponytail,
Pretty,
Puffed,
Radiant,
Rattail,
Ratty,
Raven,
Razor Cut,
Red,
Redhead,
Ribbons,
Ringlets,
Rubber Bands,
Sable,
Sandy,
Scrunched,
Scrunchies,
Shag,
Shaggy,
Shampoo,
Shape,
Shaved,
Shimmering,
Shiney,
Shiny,
Short,
Shoulder Length,
Sideburns,
Silken Blonde,
Silky,
Silver,
Skinhead,
Sleek,
Slick,
Smarmy,
Soft,
Spiked,
Spikes,
Spirals,
Split Ends,
Spray,
Straggly,
Straight,
Strand,
Strawberry Blond,
Streak,
Stringy,
Stripped,
Stubbly,
Style,
Sun Streaked,
Tangled,
Tasselled,
Tawny,
Teased,
Tendrils,
Texture,
Thick,
Thinning,
Tiara,
Tinted,
Titian,
Toque,
Toupe,
Touseled,
Towhead,
Tress,
Trim,
Turban,
Unkempt,
Upswept,
Wavy,
Weave,
Widow Peak,
Wig,
Wild,
Windblown,
Windswept,
Wings,
Wiry,
Wispy,
Wooly,
Yellow.

Download Hair Words PDF: Descriptive Words for Hair PDF

Hair Descriptive Words

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Мы собрали все формы, типы и виды волос в одной подборке. 

Что нужно знать: у слова hair в значении «волосы на голове» есть только единственное число, множественное употребляют в значении «волоски» , «волосинки» или описывают волосы на других частях тела.

Поэтому говорят:

  1. Her hair is beautyful — ее волосы красивые.
  2. I have a hair or something stuck on my lens — Наверное, волосок или еще что к линзе прилипло. Здесь a hair с артиклем означает «волосок»
  3. I have hairs on my chin — У меня есть волосы на подбородке.  Здесь множественное число при описание волос не на голове.

Транскрипция — [heə]. Произношение — hair

Содержание

  1. Формы волос

  2. Типы волос — types of hair

  3. Длина волос — length of hair

  4. Стрижки – haircuts

  5. Прически – hairstyles

  6. Цвет — hair colour

  7. Средства для волос

  8. Парикмахерская

  9. Глаголы

  10. Комплименты волосам

  11. Примеры предложений на тему волосы из Гарри Поттера

  12. Видео о типах волос на английском

Формы волос

Слово на русском Перевод
Прямые волосы Straight hair
Волнистые волосы (вьющиеся) Wavy hair
Кудрявые волосы Curly hair
Сильно курчавые волосы (африканский тип волос) Kinky Hair
Жирные у корней и сухие на кончиках Oily roots and dry ends
Тонкие волосы Thin hairfine hair
Густые волосы Thick hair

Типы волос — types of hair

Слово на русском Перевод
Жирные волосы Oily hair
Сухие волосы Dry hair
Нормальные волосы Normal hair
Смешанный тип волос Combination hair
Жирные у корней и сухие на кончиках Oily roots and dry ends

Длина волос — length of hair

Слово на русском Перевод
Короткие волосы Short hair
Длинные волосы Long hair
Волосы средней длины Medium-length hair
Волосы до плеч Shoulder-length hair
Лысый Bald
Длина волос до ушей Ear-length hair
Длина волос до подбородка Chin-length hair
Длина волос до середины спины mid-back length hair
Длина волос до пола floor-length hair
Стрижка «ежик» Buzz cut

Длина волос на английском языке

Стрижки – haircuts

Слово на русском Перевод
Челка Fringe, bangs
Лесенка layers
Каскад layered haircut
Пикси  Pixie
Каре bob
Удлиненное каре Long bob

Полный список стрижек и причесок в Википедии

Прически – hairstyles

Слово на русском Перевод
Коса, косичка Braid
Пучок Bun
Конский хвост Ponytail
Хвостики Tails
Ирокез Mohawk
Дреды Dreadlocks
Африканские косички Cornrows
Пробор Part

Прически на английском языке

Цвет — hair colour

Слово на русском Перевод
Темные волосы Dark hair
Светлые волосы Light hair, fair hair, blonde hair
Рыжие волосы Red hair
Каштановые Brown
Черные Black
Седые Gray
Русые light brown
Блондинка, блондин Blonde
Брюнетка, брюнет Brunette
Шатенка, шатен brown-haired
Мелированные волосы Highlighted hair
Крашенные Dyed hair
Цветные пряди Colored strands

Средства для волос

Слово на русском Перевод
Шампунь Shampoo
Расческа Comb
Резинка для волос Hair band
Заколка hairpin
Ободок Headband
Шпилька Hairpin
Фен Hair dryer
Бигуди Curlers

Парикмахерская

Слово на русском Перевод
Парикмахерская Hairdressing shop, Hair Salon, Barbershop
Парикмахер Hairdresser
Я бы хотел(а) постричься I’d like to get a haircut.
Я бы хотел(а) подравнять кончики I would like to trim my ends
Мне только постричь челку I just need my fringes trimmed
Постригите немного покороче Cut it a little shorter

Глаголы

Стричь волосы Cut hair
Красить волосы Dye hair
Расчесывать Brush
Мыть волосы Wash hair
Сушить волосы Dry hair
Заплетать косички Braid hair, make braids
Подравнять кончики trim

Комплименты волосам

Слово на русском Перевод
Я бы хотела такие волосы как у тебя I wish I had hair just like you
У тебя очень красивая стрижка That’s a really nice haircut
Мне очень нравятся твои волосы I really like your hair
Твои волосы выглядят такими здоровыми! Your hair looks so healthy!

Примеры предложений на тему волосы из Гарри Поттера

Her black hair was drawn into a tight bun — Ее черные волосы были собраны в тугой пучок.

“Comb your hair!” he barked, by way of a morning greeting. — «Причешись!» — рявкнул он в качестве утреннего приветствия.

Harry must have had more haircuts than the rest of the boys in his class put together, but it made no difference, his hair simply grew that way — all over the place. — Гарри, наверное, стригли чаще, чем всех остальных мальчиков в его классе вместе взятых, но это ничего не меняло, его волосы просто росли так — во все стороны.

Видео о типах волос на английском

Описываем волосы на английском

Идем в парикмахерскую

Забавное видео о разговорах в парикмахерской

Видео о волосах на русском от Puzzle English

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The conventions for referring to hair color are tousled. Why is it that we refer to someone with light-colored hair as a blonde (and, rarely, a blond) but we call someone with red hair a redhead? Why are blonde and brunette spelled two ways?

Blond and its feminine form blonde, both from the Latin word blundus (“yellow”) by way of French, may have in turn come from a Frankish word that could be related to Old English blondan, “to mix,” which shares its origins with blend. Blond is usually employed as an adjective, the term as a noun for a man with blond hair, by contrast, is rare. Because blonds and blondes are more likely to be fair-skinned as well as fair-haired, the term is also associated with light complexion.

The presence of both masculine and feminine forms for blond/blonde and brunet/brunette is due to their French (and ultimately Latin) roots, as it were, as opposed to the Germanic origins of black and red, the words for the other major hair colors, which have a neutral form.

Normally, English might have jettisoned one gendered form for blond/blonde. However, the venerable theme in popular culture of the blonde-haired woman as more sexually attractive and available (as well as flighty, shallow, and dimwitted), as compared to females with hair of another color, has caused the noun form blonde and brunette to endure.

The numerous terms for variations in blond hair, not necessarily in order of darkness, include sandy, strawberry, and dirty. Towhead (the first syllable refers to its resemblance to tow, flax or hemp fibers used for twine or yarn) describes a person with yellowish and often unruly hair.

Brunet and brunette, from the gender-specific diminutives of the French brun (“brown”), mean “brown haired.” (Brun and its diminutives originally also referred to a dark complexion.) As with blond and blonde, the male form is rarely used on its own as a noun, though the masculine and feminine variations persist probably because of the same double standard in association of hair color with female sexuality and with personality characteristics as mentioned in reference to blondes above. (Dark-haired women are stereotyped as serious, sophisticated, and capable.) Words for shades of brown hair, from darkest to lightest, are brunet/brunette, chestnut, walnut (the last two as compared to colors of the respective nuts), golden, and ash.

Redhead is yet another term for hair color used as a noun; in contrast to the colors mentioned above, it is not gender specific, though as blonde and brunette are much more common in usage than blond and brunet, it is more likely to refer to a woman than a man.

Variations in red hair, listed in alphabetical order rather than according to depth of color, include auburn, copper, ginger, and orange. (Auburn derives ultimately from the Latin word albus, meaning “white,” but thanks to the influence of brun, the French spelling — auborne — changed, as did the meaning, to “reddish brown.”) The prevailing — and long-standing — cultural stereotype about redheads is that they are hot tempered; the hair color has also been associated with a high libido.

Alone among descriptions of people with general hair tones, a black-haired person is never referred to by the word black alone.

Hair-color categories are arbitrary — strawberry blond is sometimes considered a type of red hair, and auburn might be classified as a type of brown hair — though a system called the Fischer-Saller scale, devised for anthropological and medical classification, assigns alphabetical letters and roman numerals to various grades of hair color.

I’ve found that:

Dans l’introduction, l’auteur insiste sur l’écart significatif qui existe entre les catégories chromatiques de la langue latine et celles des langues occidentales modernes. Il prend l’exemple de flauus, ‘blond’, viridis, ‘verdoyant’, et caerulus, ‘(bleu) profond’, qui renvoient à des éléments précis dont la couleur n’est que l’une des propriétés remarquables (la chevelure, les végétaux, l’eau).

The author insists on the difference in the notion of «color» for ancients and moderns, and take the example of flauus, «blond», viridis, «greenish», and caerulus, «deep» (blue), that are linked to precise elements, for which the color is only one of the remarkable properties (respectively here, the hair, the grass, the water)

From: http://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/2010/2010-09-17.html, by Adeline Grand-Clément.

So, according to this paper, there was no «brunettes» or «blond». And they didn’t consider the color names as we do, in modern societies.

In English, those words are from old French brune/brun/brunette, and blond, they are late words (I’ll add the date they entered in the French language if you are interested), so they came in English even later. they weren’t genuinely used for hair colour in old French. «Brun» means something that is brown, etc…

https://www.etymonline.com/word/blond

https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=brun

For «Rufus», it’s a surname, and it can mean «red-haired» according to Lewis & Short

«rufus quidam»: redhaired, red-headed, Plaut.

, but it can mean any other red things that the man called «Rufus» had. Maybe he was dark-haired with a reddish beard, or had always a red mantel, or anything.

The Spanish dictionary Valbuena gives «bermejo» as one of the meanings, it means «of reddish complexion».

Colours had also probably connotations like it is in modern languages, for instance, when you say «Mary the red», meaning someone who is cruel and bloody. So, it’s a difficult matter. There are books about colors connotations in ancient languages, it would require us to read them to answer the question about connotations.

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