Blonde
2006-08-13 10:07:47
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Blonde
2006-08-13 10:08:04
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answer #2
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answered by D B 4
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Maegan G is correct Blond for a male Blonde for a female.
Just like Fiancé for a male and Fiancée for a female
or Divorcé male, Divorcée female.
In fact these are the only three examples of the spelling of a word being gender specific, in the English language.
2006-08-13 10:10:09
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answer #3
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answered by Bob-bob 3
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Blonde.
2006-08-13 10:17:14
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answer #4
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answered by A*n*o*n*y*m*o*u*s 4
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Boys: Blond.
Girls: Blonde.
2006-08-13 10:08:57
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answer #5
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answered by Tima 1
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Miss Clairol 101 says blonde!
2006-08-13 10:10:27
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answer #6
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answered by DispatchGirl 4
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Is it a male or a lady? women are blonde, men are blond. and do not position self assurance in spellcheck for each thing. that is not astonishing. that is going to inform you that New Zealand isn't astonishing, yet each and every of the persons who stay there imagine it is!
2016-11-30 01:20:12
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answer #7
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answered by ? 3
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The dictionary lists those two spellings as syn. (synonyms), meaning they are the same thing:
blonde
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: blond, light-haired] [ant: brunet] n : a person with fair skin and hair [syn: blond]
Source: WordNet ® 2.0, © 2003 Princeton University
2006-08-13 10:11:28
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answer #8
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answered by Hermit 4
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Wow you must be a blonde (lol kidding no offense to anyone) and it is spelled blonde.
2006-08-13 10:08:35
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answer #9
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answered by ♫♪♫TAY-LUR♫♪♫ 3
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BLONDE. That's the only way I know it. (Yahoo Spell check sucks)
2006-08-13 10:10:10
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answer #10
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answered by BlueLantern 3
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