[
UK
/pˈəʊnɪtˌeɪl/
]
[ US /ˈpoʊniˌteɪɫ/ ]
[ US /ˈpoʊniˌteɪɫ/ ]
NOUN
- a hair style that draws the hair back so that it hangs down in back of the head like a pony's tail
How To Use ponytail In A Sentence
- She pulled the black scrunchie out of her long glossy red-gold hair, the silky strands having been confined in a simple low, sleek ponytail.
- This keeps your head and ears toasty and comes with a hole for your ponytail. The Sun
- He's on the short side, round-faced, in his fifties, his brown ponytail's going gray. Pride of craft
- Tip your hair forwards and tie into a high ponytail. The Sun
- Her long auburn hair was the same colour as Tanya's, but Tanya keeps hers up in a ponytail.
- They are indescribably charming, John with his round, open face and close-shaven hair and Leo with his rascal grin and an explosion of curls pulled into a ponytail. Washington teens John and Leo Manzari have all the right dance moves
- Her glossy hair's done up in a jaunty black ponytail and she's sizing me up from behind a cool, guarded smile.
- Other low- and no-maintenance looks include chignons, ponytails or donning a bandanna.
- After parting the hair on the side, she pulled it into a high ponytail, securing the bang with hair wax.
- My hair was scraped back into a painfully tight and still considerably wet ponytail.