VOGUE


Meaning of VOGUE in English

noun

COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS

■ VERB

come

One tonic that came into vogue was even worse: strychnine.

Luck had it that liberalism, or neo-liberalism, has since come into vogue .

It may be that with the present trend towards measurement numerical classifications will come back into vogue .

Scarlet talons came into vogue with suntanning, although they were sill considered rather racy until the mid-1930s.

Before cyanide fishing came into vogue , Hong Kong fleets had often used dynamite to blow fish out of the water.

enjoy

During the Eighties, it has been the Thatcher-Reagan model which has enjoyed the higher global vogue .

It is almost 30 years since central planning enjoyed a vogue in Britain.

This blend of Old-Testament-inspired genealogy with legendary classical origins enjoyed a new vogue in the eclectic learned circles of the period.

EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES

a vogue for the paintings of Claude Lorraine

People's fondness for wearing black and other dark colours was a vogue I never really liked.

EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS

If you want to control the vogue for greed and exploitation, then start using local suppliers.

In the 1870s, after all, when plumpness was in vogue , physicians had encouraged people to gain weight.

Longman DOCE5 Extras English vocabulary.      Дополнительный английский словарь Longman DOCE5.