0 a person who cuts people's hair and puts it into a style, usually working in a special shop, called a hairdresser's -- 理发师,美发师
I'm going to change my hairdresser. 我要换个理发师。
I've got a four o'clock appointment at the hairdresser's. 我约好了4点钟到理发店。
I asked my hairdresser to trim my fringe, but she's cut it far too short.
She went to the hairdresser's for a shampoo and set.
A limited number of up-market salons and talented hairdressers were in a position to charge high prices; and of course they had the bestpaid workers.
The logic of it, however, was not likely to comfort hairdressers, whose working lives became increasingly precarious.
By 1936, however, women accounted for over thirty-seven per cent of hairdressers nationally and an even higher proportion in the more fashion-conscious cities.
Its agents worked directly with the syndicates of hairdressers to effect, and in some respects to impose, agreements between employers and employees.
The woman blamed the hairdresser with the apprentices who was smiling all the time.
The best examples in this respect are probably the large proportions of artisans among photographers and hairdressers, both highly specialized trades dealing with individual customers.