⚡ Black Friday Offer: Click here and shop now!

TextRanch

The best way to perfect your writing.

Discover why 1,062,726 users count on TextRanch to get their English corrected!

1. Input your text below.
2. Get it corrected in a few minutes by our editors.
3. Improve your English!

One of our experts will correct your English.

Our experts

blond vs blonde

Both words are correct, but they're used in different contexts. 'Blond' is typically used as an adjective to describe males or inanimate objects, while 'blonde' is used as an adjective to describe females. The choice between 'blond' and 'blonde' depends on the gender of the person or object being described.
Miss E. profile picture

Explained by Miss E.
Editor at TextRanch

Last updated: June 02, 2024 • 1294 views

blond

This is correct when used as an adjective to describe males or inanimate objects.

Use 'blond' when describing a male or an inanimate object with light-colored hair.

Examples:

  • He has blond hair.
  • The blond wood furniture looked elegant.
  • The hospitalized Jane Doe was blond.
  • I had help from a masked blond woman in black.
  • You should totally do a shot on that blond's six pack.
  • And we like the idea of a blond.
  • Meghan stewart, blond pretty just like the other girls.
  • I'm taking you back to blond.
  • I'd start by looking for a tall blond female.
  • That blond woman who showed up at your house, what she said...
  • Go find some blond to hit on.
  • You're like a perky blond angel of death.
  • Okay, we know he's blond.
  • A little blond bombshell, a majorette.
  • You have to rescue the blond princess from the monster.
  • I thought your rival was that blond Christmas caroler.
  • Everyone else just saw a blond in a red coat.
  • And for the record, my hair's naturally blond.
  • He fits the profile... athletic, blond, young.
  • The one they want wasn't blond when we saw him.
  • The dead blond in our living room says otherwise.
  • Father, did you see a blond lady...

Alternatives:

  • light-haired
  • fair-haired
  • pale-haired
  • golden-haired
  • ashen-haired

blonde

This is correct when used as an adjective to describe females.

Use 'blonde' when describing a female with light-colored hair.

Examples:

  • She is a blonde woman.
  • The blonde actress starred in the movie.
  • That blonde outside of walgreens was getting signatures.
  • The blonde who met your man.
  • I think he's married to the blonde though.
  • She is this super positive, overly perky little blonde who...
  • My wife thought that blonde would work...
  • And I want to dye my hair blonde.
  • 3 black Mitsubishis with a blonde.
  • Nothing could be more entertaining than bottle blonde recon.
  • Evidently, they saw Timo Padia enter the club with a blonde girl.
  • She's so blonde and new.
  • The suspect is 25, blonde, medium height.
  • A hot blonde paying all your bills...
  • No one has it harder than a pretty blonde girl.
  • Just blink if she's blonde.
  • A poor, blonde, annoying fiddle.
  • I wonder if she's a blonde beauty...
  • Start tomorrow with that blonde idiot at my desk.
  • I can't believe I married a blonde.
  • I've been kissed by blonde Liv before.
  • Marty's wife is the gorgeous blonde with Feldheim.

Alternatives:

  • light-haired female
  • fair-haired woman
  • pale-haired girl
  • golden-haired lady
  • ashen-haired girl

Related Comparisons

What Our Customers Are Saying

Our customers love us! We have an average rating of 4.79 stars based on 283,125 votes.
Also check out our 2,100+ reviews on TrustPilot (4.9TextRanch on TrustPilot).

Why choose TextRanch?

Lowest prices
Up to 50% lower than other online editing sites.

Fastest Times
Our team of editors is working for you 24/7.

Qualified Editors
Native English experts for UK or US English.

Top Customer Service
We are here to help. Satisfaction guaranteed!

×

⚡️ Black Friday 2024 ⚡️

Stock up on credits for the entire year!

Grab this offer now!