0 a person who cuts people's hair and puts it into a style, usually working in a special shop, called a hairdresser's -- 理髮師,美髮師
I've got a four o'clock appointment at the hairdresser's. 我約好了四點鐘到理髮店。
I'm going to change my hairdresser. 我要換個理髮師。
Table 2 presents the comparative wages of hairdressers from 1921 to 1942.
The 1936 census counted some 126,000 coiffeures, three times the population of hairdressers at the beginning of the century.
Second, among hairdressers, 'specialists' and 'coiffeurs' were the highest-paid categories in a sharply sliding scale.
As a rule, the government, more interested in restraining inflation than in pleasing hairdressers, listened to the coiffeurs' demands and then promptly disregarded them.
No long bills to barbers and hairdressers for powder and perfumes was in his charges.
Frenchness, being stereotypically associated with up-market hairdressers, was important since the centrally located fashionable hairdresser would have profited from it.
The man noticed the hairdresser of the opera singers who was about to go home.
A client noticed the hairdresser of the actress who had blue eyes.