He kissed her on the hair.

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99bottles

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I don't have any specific sentence in mind. It just occurred to me that I had never wondered whether there is a difference between Kiss someone on the (insert body part) and Kiss someone's (insert body part). For example, is there a difference between:

He kissed her on the hair.

He kissed her hair.
 
I would use the second- the first sounds weird to me.
Is it weird only with hair? Or with other body parts too?
 
It can be okay to say He kissed her on the ... but it doesn't have quite the same meaning as He kissed her ...

He kissed her thighs.
[Her thighs are the object of his kissing]

He kissed her on the lips. [She is the object of his kissing, and the 'on-phrase' makes a special point of saying precisely which part of her is concerned]

I don't like He kissed her on the hair very much because her hair isn't very precisely located. I mean, where on the hair? Do you mean on her head?
 
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