English
Etymology
From pony + tail.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈpoʊniˌteɪl/
Noun
ponytail (plural ponytails)
- A hairstyle where the hair is pulled back and tied into a single "tail" which hangs down behind the head.
2021, Becky S. Li, Howard I. Maibach, Ethnic Skin and Hair and Other Cultural Considerations, page 154:The physician should evaluate for a history of tight ponytails, buns, chignons, braids, twists, weaves, cornrows, dreadlocks, sisterlocks, and hair wefts in addition to the usage of religious hair coverings.
Derived terms
Translations
hairstyle
- Arabic: ذَيْل الْحِصَان m (ḏayl al-ḥiṣān)
- Egyptian Arabic: ديل حصان m (dél ḥuṣan)
- Gulf Arabic: عنقوص m (ʕangūṣ)
- Bulgarian: конска опашка f (konska opaška)
- Catalan: cua (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 馬尾辮 / 马尾辫 (zh) (mǎwěibiàn), 馬尾 / 马尾 (zh) (mǎwěi)
- Czech: culík m
- Danish: hestehale (da) c
- Esperanto: ponevosto
- Finnish: poninhäntä (fi)
- French: queue-de-cheval (fr) f
- German: Pferdeschwanz (de) m, Rossschwanz m (Swiss German)
- Greek: αλογοουρά (el) f (alogoourá)
- Hebrew: קוּקוּ (he) m (kúku), זנב סוס (znáv-sús)
- Hungarian: lófarok (hu)
- Icelandic: tagl (is) n, stertur m
- Indonesian: kuncir kuda
- Irish: pónaí m
- Italian: coda di cavallo f
- Japanese: ポニーテール (ja) (ponītēru)
- Korean: 포니테일 (poniteil)
- Macedonian: ко́њска о́пашка f (kónjska ópaška), о́павче n (ópavče)
- Norman: coue d'ponîn f
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: hestehale m
- Nynorsk: hestehale m
- Polish: kucyk (pl) m
- Portuguese: rabo de cavalo (pt) m
- Romanian: coadă (ro)
- Russian: ко́нский хвост m (kónskij xvost), хво́стик (ru) m (xvóstik)
- Spanish: coleta (es) f, coletilla (es) f, cola de caballo (es) f rabo capilar / capital / piloso / caballuno / caballar m, hopo (es) m, kiki / quiqui m (colloquial)
- Swedish: hästsvans (sv) c
- Tagalog: puyod
- Thai: หางม้า (hǎang-máa)
- Turkish: atkuyruğu (tr)
- Welsh: cynffon merlen f
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Verb
ponytail (third-person singular simple present ponytails, present participle ponytailing, simple past and past participle ponytailed)
- (transitive) To form (the hair) into a ponytail.
2017, A. W. Hartoin, Brain Trust:“Don't mention it,” she said, ponytailing her hair and then sockbunning it with amazing speed.
See also