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[ UK /hˈe‍əduː/ ]
[ US /ˈhɛɹˌdu/ ]
NOUN
  1. the arrangement of the hair (especially a woman's hair)

How To Use hairdo In A Sentence

  • She was about fifty years old, with a moon face and pixie hairdo, wearing a light cotton kimono.
  • Like a US flag flying in front of a structure, like tatooes and piercings, the cornrows hairdo is a clue warning the disfavored to stay away. You Are Nothing Without Your Robot. Nothing. « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • She doesn't seem to be sporting a new hairdo, so what could possibly have taken so long? The Sun
  • His once bouffant hairdo had looked lank and stringy, and the perfectly unshaven designer stubble could not hide the lines on his face.
  • Although she followed this with hit after hit, she was desperately insecure and hid herself under thick make-up and a beehive hairdo.
  • Labour's most memorable poster during its campaign was one of Tory leader William Hague, with his normally bald head sporting Margaret Thatcher's stiffly lacquered hairdo.
  • The hairdo also had a dollar sign shaved into the back of it. The Sun
  • Perfect if the mood takes you to have a wet shave or new hairdo while out shopping for designer clobber. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hoogie, whose new coiffed hairdo is a match for Thorpe's sweeping Eurotrash look, ripped the olive branch off his head after receiving his silver medal behind the Australian.
  • There are countless ways in which a woman can reinvent herself these days, from a new hairdo to full-on plastic surgery. Times, Sunday Times
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