Marked by dark or relatively dark pigmentation of hair or skin or eyes.
1Most strongly contrasted externally with the 'Boreal' type is the slight-built Mediterranean brunet.
2Putnam cites the case of a healthy brunet, aged forty, the mother of three children.
3I owe them no good will, considering the brunet one's treatment of me that night.
4He is dark, with little side-whiskers, dressed like a dandy, dark eyes, a warm brunet.
5I should say you're an ordinary brunet now.
6His hair was a nondescript shade of brunet.
7The young brunet wanted to know more.
8Among authors: brunet a. Mol Biol Cell.
9Sheena stood screaming beside me, her blond hair flaring in the wind to show her brunet roots.
10I go in anyway and am greeted by Agent Spodek, a tall, attractive brunet in her early thirties.
11Dennis, the one with the unmarred feet, was a brunet with watery blue eyes and a young man's mustache.
12The man alongside the train was a large fellow, brunet and heavyset but not so much fat as beefy.
14Here. He turned his head farther, his brunet profile etched against the blue satin pillowcase the color of my eyes.
15Think of how differently you might approach a witness who has a bleached mohawk versus one who has a natural brunet bouffant.
16Blonds are assigned to interior duty so they may be seen in the dark, while the brunet and olivish patrol the garishly lighted lobbies.