Comparative form of blonde; more blonde in color than something or someone else.
Comparative form created by adding '-er' to 'blonde,' following standard English rules for forming comparisons of one-syllable adjectives.
The expression 'getting blonder' by sun exposure is part of summer culture in many countries—though the mechanism is your hair's natural light highlights becoming more visible, not your hair actually changing color!
Comparative form of blonde, reinforcing hierarchical beauty standards that treat hair color on a scale of desirability. Historically applied to women as a metric of attractiveness.
Avoid comparative framings of hair color as a beauty ranking. If describing literal shade, use 'lighter-haired' or 'lighter blonde' descriptively.
["lighter-haired","lighter blonde (in shade)"]
Comparative beauty language has systematically ranked women by appearance; moving away from comparative aesthetics supports full humanity recognition.
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