Had he been a commonplace German hairdresser he would have understood English, and all might have been easy.
In theory it is absurd: the hairdresser is a man and a brother: but we are none of us logical all the way.
The hairdresser had recovered consciousness in time to see them waddling over the grass.
Steps would be taken--later in the week--the result of which would probably be to render that young hairdresser prematurely bald.
When the officer returned with the chaperon he found the hairdresser sitting opposite to them, explaining that he really was not hurt, and suggesting that, as they were there, perhaps they would like something to eat and drink.
I even remember that Marie said, "The hairdresser has come, Madame.
The Queen was also desirous of being served by the most fashionable hairdresser in Paris.
But when ladies had powdered top-knots, thehairdresser made his harvest, especially when a ball or a rout made the calls for his services many and imperative.
A witty Parisian hairdresser on one of the Boulevards put up a sign having on it a portrait of Absalom dangling by his hair from a tree, and Joab piercing his body with a spear.
She wore no hair powder, but this plainness had not prevented the hairdresser building up her tresses a foot above her forehead.
Then he returned to the room where the hairdresser was about to give the lady the first proofs of his skill.
The hairdresser was engaged to come at six o'clock; the dress was a marvel on which twenty-six seamstresses were sewing the pearls, ribbons and trimmings, so that it would be done in time instead of taking a week as usual.
In the first place myhairdresser was spirited away.
Captain Jackman walked down the steep street watched by the jeweller and a hairdresser who had stepped from opposite when the captain marched off.
And the jeweller, half-closing one eye, pulled out a handful of glittering sovereigns, at which the hairdresser gazed with admiration.
He asked him if the bracelet had been delivered, and they fell into conversation, watched by the hairdresser opposite, who wished his father had bred him a jeweller.
A visit to a clever hairdresser before they left had completed their disguise.
The necessity for the constant renewal of their various disguises was not overlooked, and the hairdresser was prevailed upon to part with a supply of his dyes and to tell them exactly how and when to apply them.
David thought this rather an odd way of doing things, since you usually had your shampoo first, and your brushing afterwards, but the hairdresser didn’t seem to mind.
The hairdresser wrapped a towel round his head, and began drying it.
After his solitary night in the train, David longed for a little conversation again, and he went to the nearest old gentleman, who was eating eggs and bacon, while the hairdresser scrubbed his head with the circular brush.
The fickle Babylonish harlot went fluttering off with that amount of bashful coyness, that the hairdresseronce sent a bullet within an ace of the fellow who was working her backwards and forwards.
The hairdresser fired, struck the eagle on the leg, and the leg remained hanging aloft, with the imperial globe in the talons.
The hairdresser reappeared unexpectedly, bringing a fleeting cloud with him.
The hairdresser came, and declared it to be a queue, and civilly took it away himself to get it changed.
The hairdresser immediately made proclamation of the fact, and Sir Gilbert was totally defeated.
The hairdresser asked him whether Sir Gilbert Elliott was not one of the seven kings--a name of ridicule given to Fox's seven proposed commissioners for India.
The Gradewitz hairdresser had waved their front hair and made it into an enormous roll over the forehead, with the help of some padding.
The Gradewitz dressmaker would have been asked to do it, as she was also the hairdresser of the neighbourhood, but she had taken offence when she heard that Mrs. Tiralla had got her ball-dress from Posen.
Guersaint said to Pierre: "And the hairdresser on the Place du Marcadal, I really must go and see him.
The whole of the house had been let, entirely given over, and now had come the last hours of this invasion which compelled the hairdresser and his wife to seek refuge in the narrow cellar, where they slept on a small camp-bed.
You know whom I mean--the hairdresser on the Place du Marcadal.
My idea is to go as far as the Place du Marcadal in the old town; for the servant girl at the hotel told me of a hairdresser there whose brother lets out conveyances cheaply.
At first the hairdresser declined to enter into the matter, pretending that they must apply to his brother at the Champ Commun; but at last he consented to take the order.
Turner, the father of the great painter, was a hairdresser in Dean Street, and Nollekens' father died in No.
Wheatley describes a row of low-built shops standing before the tavern, one of which was that of the hairdresser Rowland, who made a fortune by his macassar oil.
Meanwhile" (I seem to hear you say) "what of the hairdresser who has the same name as yourself and plies his trade next door but one?
A moment later all my anxieties dispersed and tragedy turned to comedy when I realised that the bill was for the hairdresser with the same name as my own, who lives next door but one and gets so much of my correspondence.
In his high, cracked voice, the hairdresser was sure that, pale or glowing, grave or gay, Mistress Evelyn Byrd would be the toast at the ball that night.
The hairdresser drew a comb through the rippling brown tresses and commenced his most elaborate arrangement, working with pursed lips, and head bent now to this side, now to that.
The picture one gets from contrasting the famous Melanchton to Zizi the hairdresser is not exactly fair, as it would be unfair to contrast the Library of Alexandria to the Internet.
Topos uranikos distributed This book began by contrasting the readers of the past to today's typical literate: Zizi the hairdresser and her boyfriend, the taxi driver with the college degree in political science.
It was no accident that she took the chair of the Spanish hairdresser who served her before.
I followed Lena and the Spanish hairdresser into a place as dark as a stack of black cats.
That tall girl, Lena, could tell this hairdresser anything—just anything at all.
She was talking to that Spanish hairdresser and a strange man, who said, ‘Du must!
The picture of Lena and the Spanish hairdresser standing in the moonlight again fascinated her, and once more she felt that terrifying grip on her arm as a man’s voice said, “Oh!
And that one,” she thought with a start, “is the one I took of the Spanish hairdresserat Fort Des Moines.
Even the Spanish hairdresserhad not been convicted of espionage.
The one of that Spanish hairdresserat Fort Des Moines.
It was a good, clear picture of the Spanish hairdresser standing by the gate at Fort Des Moines.
Yes, there had been the whispered words on that first night at Fort Des Moines, Lena’s apparent friendship with the Spanish hairdresser and that startling affair of the self-locking door at night in a Des Moines repair shop.
He kept the one I took of the Spanish hairdresserat Fort Des Moines.
When I re-entered the hotel it was nearly seven o'clock, and, as I did so, the porter at the revolving door in Princes Street touched his cap and informed me that the hairdresser desired to see me again.
Ten minutes later I was with the German hairdresser on a tram-car, going up Regent Road, towards Abbey Hill.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hairdresser" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.