This is driving me nuts.
So, I know that if you're talking about a-woman-who-has-fair-hair she is 'a blonde', whereas the male equivalent is 'a blond', since we stole the word from French.
But 'blond' as an adjective...? Is it always the masculine form? so: 'She had blond hair'? or 'The blond woman'??
I looked it up in the (compact) OED but that doesn't completely help, it says:
".... to be usually written with a final e when applied to a woman, especially substantively, a blonde; otherwise commonly written blond like the french masculine."
which implies (I think) that when it's applied to a woman, in general, you use the e (but what does it mean 'especially', then?)
Grammar girl says you don't add the e when it's an adjective. And wikipedia is just confusing.
So, I know that if you're talking about a-woman-who-has-fair-hair she is 'a blonde', whereas the male equivalent is 'a blond', since we stole the word from French.
But 'blond' as an adjective...? Is it always the masculine form? so: 'She had blond hair'? or 'The blond woman'??
I looked it up in the (compact) OED but that doesn't completely help, it says:
".... to be usually written with a final e when applied to a woman, especially substantively, a blonde; otherwise commonly written blond like the french masculine."
which implies (I think) that when it's applied to a woman, in general, you use the e (but what does it mean 'especially', then?)
Grammar girl says you don't add the e when it's an adjective. And wikipedia is just confusing.