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Sentences with hair

hair
H h
  • I wash my hair every night.
  • The majority of men have hair on their chest.
  • Only one hair colour is taboo among Japan's most fashionable.
  • He was a hair off on the count.
  • I am allergic to cat hair.
  • The stinging nettle has a square stem and little hairs.
  • He won the race by a hair.
  • He has a thick head of hair.
  • A hair carpet
  • To miss by a hair
  • He got his hair cut last week.
  • He has a lot of hair on his chest.
  • hair tonic
  • He lost the race by a hair.
  • The hair on her arms is blond.
  • There are dog hairs all over my coat.
  • Their snobbishness gets in my hair.
  • Even a hair of the dog didn't help his aching head.
  • Doctors have spent decades searching for a way to reverse hair loss.
  • Hair can be both a count and an uncount noun. When you are describing people, you usually use the uncount sense. She has long blonde hair and blue eyes. ...the girl with red hair and freckles. However, when you particularly want to refer to one or several of the individual strands that grow from your head or body, you can use the count sense. There were some blonde hairs in the car... A single fibre thinner than a hair.
  • He finally let his hair down and actually cracked a joke.
  • The tales of the jungle made our hair stand on end.
  • To argue about whether they arrived at two o'clock or at 2:01 is just splitting hairs.
  • He's tearing his hair over the way he was treated by them.
  • The reproduction matched the original to a hair.
  • In the western world, women usually have long hair while men usually have short hair.
  • Internal hairs occur in the flower stalk of the yellow frog lily (Nuphar).
  • Just a little louder please—turn that knob a hair to the right.
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