Dictionary Definition
blond adj : being or having light colored skin
and hair and usually blue or gray eyes; "blond Scandinavians"; "a
house full of light-haired children" [syn: blonde, light-haired]
[ant: brunet] n : a
person with fair skin and hair [syn: blonde]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative spellings
- blonde (US)
Etymology
- from Middle French "blond" (masculine); "blonde" (feminine) which likely derived from Germanic (compare Old English "blondenfeax" - grey-haired).
Noun
Usage notes
- In the English language, it is only one of a few distinct words where the gender differentiation is actually reflected in the spelling of the word (i.e. She is a blonde woman. vs. He is a blond man.), even though this is a relatively common occurrence in other languages. "Blond(e)" has only recently been borrowed from French into English to refer to light hair; traditional terms for light hair in English are "fair(-haired)", "flaxen", and "tow headed".
Translations
fair skinned/haired person
- Hebrew: בלונדיני (blondyni) , בלונדינית (blondynit)
- Hungarian: szőke
- Ido: blonda
- Irish: fionn (of both males and females), fear fionn , bean fhionn
- Russian: блондин, блондинка
- Scottish Gaelic: bàn, fionn (of both males and females), fear bàn , bean bhàn
- Spanish: rubio , canche italbrac Guatemala, catire italbrac Venezuela, chele , choco italbrac Bolivia, fulo italbrac Panama, gringo italbrac Peru, güero italbrac Mexico, macho italbrac Costa Rica, mono italbrac Colombia, rucio italbrac Chile, suco italbrac Ecuador. For female : rubia, canche italbrac unchangeable, catira, chela, choca, fula, gringa, güera, macha, mona, rucia, suca
- Swedish: blondin
- Welsh: penfelyn
Adjective
- Of a bleached, or pale golden colour.
- Of a blond complexion (referring to a person)
Translations
colour
- Esperanto: blonda
- Swedish: blond
person's complexion
See also
Dutch
Pronunciation
Adjective
blond (blonde)- of light colour, usually said about light hair colour, but it can also refer to beer
Swedish
Pronunciation
Adjective
blond- of light hair colour
- of light complexion
Inflection
Extensive Definition
Blond (also spelled blonde, see below) is a
hair
color found in certain people characterized by low levels of
the dark pigment
eumelanin. The resultant
visible hue depends on various factors, but always has some sort of
yellowish color, going
from the very pale blond
caused by a patchy, scarce distribution of pigment, to reddish
"strawberry" blond colors or golden brownish blond colors, the
latter with more eumelanin.
Etymology, spelling, and grammar
The word blonde was first attested in English in 1481 and derives from Old French blont and meant "a colour midway between golden and light chestnut". It largely replaced the native term fair, from Old English fæger. The French (and thus also the English) word blond has two possible origins. Some linguists say it comes from Middle Latin blundus, meaning yellow, from Old Frankish *blund which would relate it to Old English blonden-feax meaning grey-haired, from blondan/blandan meaning to mix. Also, Old English beblonden meant dyed as ancient Germanic warriors were noted for dyeing their hair. However, other linguists who desire a Latin origin for the word say that Middle Latin blundus was a vulgar pronunciation of Latin flavus, also meaning yellow. Most authorities, especially French, attest the Frankish origin. The word was reintroduced into English in the 17th century from French, and was for some time considered French, hence blonde for females/noun and blond for males/adjective.Writers of English often will still distinguish
between the masculine
blond and the feminine
blonde and, as such, it is one of the few adjectives in English
with separate masculine
and feminine forms. However, many writers use only one of the
spellings without regard to gender, and without a clear majority
usage one way or another. The word is also often used as a noun to
refer to a woman with blond hair, but some speakers see this usage
as sexist. In certain
European populations, however, the occurrence of blond hair is very
frequent, and often remains throughout adulthood. The hair color
gene MC1R has at least seven variants in Europe and the continent
has an unusually wide range of hair and eye shades. Based on recent
genetic
information carried out at three Japanese universities, the date of
the genetic mutation that resulted in blond hair in Europe has been
isolated to about 11,000 years ago during the last Ice Age. Before
then, Europeans mostly had darker hair and eyes, which is
predominant in the rest of the world. According to the study, the
appearance of blond hair and blue eyes in some northern European
women made them stand out from their rivals at a time of fierce
competition for scarce males. The study argues that blond hair was
produced higher in the Cro-Magnon
descended population of the European region because of food
shortages 10,000-11,000 years ago following the last
glacial period when the most of it was covered by steppe-tundra.
Almost the only sustenance in northern Europe came from roaming
herds of mammoths, reindeer, bison and horses and finding them
required long, arduous hunting trips in which numerous males died,
leading to a high ratio of surviving women to men. This hypothesis
argues that women with blond hair posed an alternative that helped
them mate and thus increased the number of blonds.
According to the authors of The History and
Geography of Human Genes (1994), blond hair became predominant in
Europe in about 3000 BC, in the area now known as Lithuania, among
the recently arrived Proto-Indo-European
settlers though the trait spread quickly through sexual
selection into Scandinavia
when that area was settled because men found women with blond hair
attractive.
In 2002 there was a worldwide hoax
that scientists predicted blonds were eventually going to become
extinct. The hoax cited WHO as the source of
the scientific study. See recessive
alleles for more information on the genetic basis of blond
hair.
General behavior of light colored dogs
In a study by Spanish researcher Pérez-Guisado golden/yellow dogs exhibited the most aggressive and dominant behavior together with red dogs, second most aggressive was black dogs and the most mild-mannered was brown and semi-colored dogs. It's still uncertain if humans have this correlation as well.Geographic distribution
Blonde hair is at the highest frequency among the
indigenous peoples of Northern
Europe. Blonde and light hair are in the majority in countries
like Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Germany, Holland, Poland,
Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland and England.
Generally, blond hair in Europeans is associated with paler
eye
color (gray, blue, green and light brown) and pale (sometimes
freckled) skin tone. Strong sunlight also lightens hair of any
pigmentation, to varying degrees, and causes many blond people to
freckle, especially during childhood.
In Norse
mythology, both the goddess Sif (wife of Thor) and the major
goddess Freyja are described
as blonde. In the eddic poem Rígsthula,
the blond man Jarl was considered to be the ancestor to the
dominant warrior class.
In Northern Europe fairy lore, fairies value blond
hair in humans. Blond babies are more likely to be stolen and
replaced with changelings, and young blonde
women are more likely to be lured away to the land of the fairies.
In ancient Greece, although not
all of the gods exhibited the trait, blond hair was seen as a sign
of divinity. This idea may have developed due to the fact that
blondes were seen as exotic and otherworldly, when compared to the
mostly dark-haired, dark-eyed population of Greece.
In European fairy tales,
blond hair was commonly ascribed to the heroes and heroines. This
may occur in the text, as in Madame
d'Aulnoy's La Belle aux cheveux d'or or
The Beauty with Golden Hair, or in illustrations depicting the
scenes. One notable exception is Snow White
who, because of her mother's wish for a child "as red as blood, as
white as snow, as black as ebony," has dark hair. This tendency
appears also in more formal literature; in Milton's "Paradise
Lost" the noble and innocent Adam and Eve have "golden
tresses", while near the end of J. R. R.
Tolkien's monumental Lord of
the Rings, the especially favourable year following the War of
the Ring was signified in the Shire by an exceptional number of
blond-haired children.
In contemporary popular culture, it is often
stereotyped that men find blonde women more attractive than women
with other hair colors. Alfred
Hitchcock preferred to cast blonde women for major roles in his
films as he believed that the audience would suspect them the
least, hence the term "Hitchcock blonde". Blonde jokes
are a class of derogatory jokes based on a "dumb blonde"
stereotype of blonde women being unintelligent, sexually
promiscuous, or both. In other parts of modern culture, blonde
women are often portrayed as "promiscuous", leading to the stereotype that blondes "have
more fun." Jean Harlow
(a natural ash blonde) and Marilyn
Monroe (pale blond as a child though her hair darkened to
brown) were notable bleached blonde sex icons of twentieth-century
America, frequently portraying stereotypical dumb blondes
in their films.
In the early-mid twentieth century, Nordicists
such as Madison
Grant and Alfred
Rosenberg associated blond hair with a Nordic race,
which they distinguished from a larger Aryan race
that included what they called the non-blond Alpine race.
During World War
II, blond hair was one of the traits used by Nazis to select Slavic
children for
Germanization.
External links
blond in Old English (ca. 450-1100): Fæger
hǣr
blond in Aymara: Paqupaqu
blond in Danish: Blondine
blond in German: Blond
blond in Spanish: Rubio
blond in French: Blondeur
blond in Scottish Gaelic: Gruag bhàn
blond in Croatian: Plavuše
blond in Italian: Capelli biondi
blond in Hebrew: בלונד
blond in Georgian: ქერა
blond in Dutch: Blond
blond in Japanese: 金髪
blond in Polish: Blond (kolor)
blond in Portuguese: Loiro
blond in Quechua: Suqu
blond in Russian: Блондины
blond in Simple English: Blonde
blond in Slovenian: Blond
blond in Serbian: Плавокосе особе
blond in Serbo-Croatian: Plavuša
blond in Finnish: Vaaleahiuksisuus
blond in Swedish: Blond
blond in Chinese: 金髮
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ash blond, ash-blond, bleached blond,
bleached-blond, blond-haired, blond-headed, brunet, carrottop, champagne, flaxen, flaxen-haired, golden, golden-haired, goldilocks, honey blond,
honey-blond, light,
peroxide blond, peroxide-blond, platinum, platinum blond,
platinum-blond, redhead,
straw, strawberry blond,
towhead, towheaded, xanthous