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How To Use In vogue In A Sentence

  • City living is back in vogue.
  • The Oscar dress, a chic black number with a rouched-shoulder detail, was created for one of our judges, Livia Firth, who took ethical fashion to the red carpet this year and was featured in Vogue, on TV and in fashion gossip all around the world. Observer Ethical Awards: From Somewhere, Ethical Fashion Award
  • TOKYO She may be cute, but the latest top model to make her debut in Vogue is also podgy with short legs and whiskers.
  • The literary ghost story is in vogue at the moment and this one is beautifully done. Times, Sunday Times
  • The nobler arts of magic, astrology, alchymy, necromancy, &c., were equally in vogue in this age with that of the infernal art proper. The Superstitions of Witchcraft
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  • Becoming an entrepreneur seems to be in vogue in this downturn.
  • To avoid then thefe inconventeneds; and feveral others xxfc may fafl into by oppofing commonly received opinions'* we ought, in what Place or Society foe - vcr we be, to make a Draught or Map of all the opinions in vogue there, and of the place and rank each of them holds there, that we may have all the confideratioii for them which Charity and Truth can, permit* Moral Essays: Contain'd in Several Treatises on Many Important Duties
  • The only thing that really puzzled me was the first sentence (Now that fur is back in vogue, I've been thinking about splurging on a coat this winter): If fur is back in vogue, then why are pelt prices in the dumper right now? Why Real Fur Is Greener Than Fake
  • ATTRIBUTION: HILTON KRAMER, The New York Times art critic, in the late 1960s when the term “minimal art” was in vogue. Hilton Kramer (1928-)
  • Moreover, institutions, along with concepts from the new microeconomics such as bounded rationality and imperfect information, are now in vogue, which is all to the good.
  • Short skirts are very much in vogue just now.
  • The military coup may be a thing of the past, but the popular coup is in vogue.
  • All the mod clothes in vogue? Times, Sunday Times
  • Popsicle sticks are still in vogue, as are styrofoam, garden hose tubing, particle board, wire and glitter glue.
  • With BioShock, most of us had never read Ayn Rand before, but it was suddenly in vogue to pretend we had. Archive 2009-02-01
  • Wall Street has a retro '80s look these days with buyouts and takeovers back in vogue.
  • How else to explain Vogue editor Anna Wintour's decision this month to publish a 3,000-word paean to that "freshest and most magnetic of first ladies," Syria's Asma al-Assad? The Dictator's Wife Wears Louboutins
  • In order to obviate that, because money is fungible and budget-cutting is suddenly in vogue, you would think that government agencies would be aggressively trimming noncritical, nonlife-threatening expenditures and diverting scarce resources to genuinely pressing needs. Waste And Bad Judgment Sprout At The USDA
  • Willow or hazel panels are in vogue and give an informal, rustic feel. Times, Sunday Times
  • The combination of gold with creative materials, colourful precious stones and semi-precious stones is also very much in vogue.
  • Official records, opened in 1990 when glasnost was still in vogue, show that Stalin had every intention of treating the Poles as political prisoners.
  • The combination of gold with creative materials, colourful precious stones and semi-precious stones is also very much in vogue.
  • This system, in vogue during the colonial era, enabled the colonial powers to carve out their own commercial spheres of influence in the countries within their imperial domain.
  • But it will never repay a certain kind of close reading, that which is in vogue today and looks for aporias, fissures, self-subversions, and the rest of the deconstructionist's tool-kit.
  • It is an interesting to consider: what death practices with be in vogue as the world continues to shrink, blend, adapt and reinvent?
  • IT may be cute, but the latest top model to do IT debut in Vogue is too podgy with short legs and whiskers.
  • It is precisely the cultural popularity, the people spirit pursue fast-food, the human nature personalization, facilitated the Zhu Deyong cartoon widely to be in vogue.
  • They were obliged to confess that Brownsville was about the rowdiest town of Texas, which was the most lawless State in the Confederacy; but they declared they had never seen an inoffensive man subjected to insult or annoyance, although the shooting-down and stringing-up systems are much in vogue, being almost a necessity in a thinly-populated State, much frequented by desperadoes driven away from more civilized countries. Three Months in the Southern States: April, June, 1863.
  • I desire you to dismiss from your minds certain phrases which I am sorry to find much in vogue amongst you.
  • It was established by a Japanese gardener at the time the house was built - when such gardens were in vogue - but over the years has become more anglicised, added to and replanted by Lady Sandberg.
  • On making inquiries from the leading seedsmen throughout Australia, and asking what varieties of salad plants are mostly in vogue, you find that the cabbage lettuce is almost the sole representative. The Art of Living in Australia
  • Dance films were in vogue in the 1980s.
  • Another way to true post-industrial decline, which is currently in vogue in certain circles, is to resort to the old isolationist notion of autarchy. Robert Teitelman: On the nostalgia for manufacturing
  • Even at 82, Dr. Maya (as I called her) was as in vogue as any of the women who walked the treelined streets outside of her home. Cheryl Wills: Phenomenally Yours: A Sit-Down With Dr. Maya Angelou
  • You try to concentrate on learning pertinent facts and are aware that what is now in vogue will eventually become dated.
  • Another way to true post-industrial decline, which is currently in vogue in certain circles, is to resort to the old isolationist notion of autarchy. Robert Teitelman: On the nostalgia for manufacturing
  • A mode of divination much in vogue in New England as in Old. Called also “sieve and shears” or “riddle and shears”: the learned name is coscinomancy. "Letter of Thomas Brattle, F. R. S., 1692"; from Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648-1706
  • From the rise of 'journalling' to the world's greatest pencil, notes are now in vogue Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • All the mod clothes in vogue? Times, Sunday Times
  • Incentives were in vogue even in the early 1950s.
  • Wise young chanteuses seem to be very much in vogue right now.
  • Of course, the whole 'orientalist' paintings were also in vogue some remarkable work there - there is a great book about Orientlist Painting:Orientalists: Western Artists in Arabia, the Sahara, Persia and Hardcover Church and the Mirror
  • The cholos baptized their clubs in Spanish, just because the banda was in vogue.
  • Staying put may now be in vogue, but it is not always voluntary. Times, Sunday Times
  • Words coined during the dark days of the 1930s such as "bankster", which is a mix of banker and gangster, are suddenly back in vogue as a younger generation of Europeans used to more than a decade of consumerism gets its first taste of dole queues. WHAT REALLY HAPPENED
  • Understandably, the most talented want to follow Grierson's tradition of one-off, authored films, rather than the kind of docusoaps and reality TV currently in vogue.
  • However, mothers and grannies of the bride need not be alarmed, as wraps, boleros and capes are very much in vogue for the service at least.
  • Another treatment which has some merit, and which has long enjoyed a certain vogue among both medical men and the laity, is a combination of equal parts of lime-water with either olive or linseed oil; this is called carron oil and is applied in the same way as the picric acid solution. Health on the Farm A Manual of Rural Sanitation and Hygiene
  • Vampires have had times of being in vogue before, but nothing like they are now. VAMPIRES- WHY HERE, WHY NOW? | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews
  • Treatments in vogue included horseback riding for pulmonary tuberculosis, and a decoction of carrots for jaundice.
  • Since the mustache part of General Burnside's invention was nothing new, the cheek whiskers became known as ‘Burnsides’ and enjoyed a certain vogue among men of the day.
  • A glamorous photo spread in Vogue this year began a transformation to more public images.
  • He points out the shimmering red and gold curtains lining the kitchen door, a manifestation of the seraglio theme currently in vogue. THE SAVAGE GIRL
  • Uretic, yellow photographs are much in vogue. Times, Sunday Times
  • Chic shops specialising in one luxury item are again in vogue in the French capital. Times, Sunday Times
  • Traditional corks are in vogue although plastic ones are at least squidgier than they used to be. Times, Sunday Times
  • -- whether he should follow after that way of life to which you exhort me, and act what you call the manly part of speaking in the assembly, and cultivating rhetoric, and engaging in public affairs, according to the principles now in vogue; or whether he should pursue the life of philosophy; -- and in what the latter way differs from the former. Gorgias
  • Trips to India seem to be in vogue with people I know.
  • Costume dramas are very much back in vogue at the moment. The Sun
  • This combination of instruments was still in vogue in the time of Haydn and Mozart, and was used in most of their works for the Church except that they sometimes added two flutes, two clarinets (woodwind instrument of ancient origin, so called on account of the resemblance of its tones to the high tones of the clarino, or trumpet), and two trumpets. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • Incidentally, Tennyson’s “samite” (inMorte d’Arthur, as worn by the disembodied arm that belongs to the Lady of the Lake) was a brilliantly contrived exercise in etymological archaeology, and strictly speakingmeant (via the Latin samitum and, in turn, the Greek hexamiton) a six-ply silk brocade incorporating gold and silver threads, much in vogue during the Middle Ages, but let us not be deflected. Further Pavlova
  • Also called pimentón, it's very much in vogue these days among the foodies, which is understandable because it's the simplest way conceivable to bring a rich, smoky Spanish flavor profile to your palate. Robert Rosenthal: The 3 Herbs & Spices That Will Instantly Improve Your Cooking
  • Of late, it's been very much in vogue to beat up on the young. Ilana Ross: Your Youth: A Time To Make Mistakes (That Will Haunt Your Political Career Forever)
  • This fashion is actively supported by clothing designers who specifically design boxer shorts or thongs to sit above the very low-cut pants in vogue right now.
  • What were called ‘Chinoiserie’ styles of alleged Asian designs were in vogue for those who wanted a lighter alternative to the formality of baroque or neoclassicism.
  • Diligence (Latin, Industria) (ethics, brought the term exceedingly in vogue, opposes Sloth, Latin Acedia): A zealous thinking hereby to draw the philosophers to and careful nature in one's actions and Christianity, who aspired after such a work. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • It's a prime example of the sort of pseudo-economic jargon that's so much in vogue, and is a neat way of saying that we are too busy funding our hectic lives and second homes to find time to look after our parents or children.
  • When extreme ascetism was in vogue in the patristic period you had nutcases like Phibionites outside the Church and watered down nuts for ascetism like Tertullian within (till he left).
  • The interrobang was in vogue for much of the 1960s, with the word "interrobang" appearing in some dictionaries and the mark itself being featured in magazine and newspaper articles. Daring Fireball
  • _Ball Dresses_ of light materials are most in vogue, and are generally made of two and three skirts; as white _tulle_, with three skirts, trimmed all round with a broad, open-worked satin ribbon; the third skirt being raised on one side, and attached with a large bouquet of flowers, whilst the ribbon is twisted, and ascends to the side of the waist, where it finishes; the same kind of flowers serves to ornament the sleeves and centre of the corsage, which is also trimmed with a deep drapery of _tulle_. The International Monthly, Volume 2, No. 4, March, 1851
  • The _chatouilleur_, or tickler, a variety of the genus _claqueur_, is in vogue chiefly at the smaller theatres. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 61, No. 376, February, 1847
  • But ponchos and capes are back in vogue too as well as oversize batwing or kimono jumpers, and they should give us all a bit of a break from the trim, belted look.
  • He was able to communicate with Jehovah himself, and the simple instrument that he used was one that is always in vogue with the human race, that is, the instrumentality of prayer. The United States—Its General Atmosphere and Conditions
  • But ponchos and capes are back in vogue too as well as oversize batwing or kimono jumpers, and they should give us all a bit of a break from the trim, belted look.
  • New Anglo-Saxon chronicles have been in vogue this year. Times, Sunday Times
  • This sounds to me a bit like Paris Hilton telling me that a certain hairstyle is no longer in vogue. Thinking About the Vision - NASA Watch
  • Popsicle sticks are still in vogue, as are styrofoam, garden hose tubing, particle board, wire and glitter glue.
  • Sharp tailored suits are very much in vogue at the moment.
  • He was well – mounted upon a sturdy chestnut cob, and had the graceful seat of an experienced horseman; while his riding gear, though free from such fopperies as were then in vogue, was handsome and well chosen. Barnaby Rudge
  • In a period when greenishness is suddenly in vogue, the council backers (chiefly Bates and Capitelli) of the attempted emasculation of Berkeley's current effective preservation ordinance should be thoroughly ashamed of themselves. The Berkeley Daily Planet, The East Bay's Independent Newspaper
  • Concrete has been in vogue for some time. Times, Sunday Times
  • The metayer system was in vogue, especially on temple lands. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 1 "Austria, Lower" to "Bacon"
  • Panache provides the women folk nostalgic images by reviving the art of handmade jewellery as they are now not in vogue.
  • The cocktail was back in vogue, Broadway was booming, and new restaurants and nightclubs were opening every week.
  • Brownsville was about the rowdiest town of Texas, which was the most lawless state in the Confederacy; but they declared they had never seen an inoffensive man subjected to insult or annoyance, although the shooting-down and stringing-up systems are much in vogue, being almost a necessity in a thinly-populated state, much frequented by desperadoes driven away from more civilised countries. Three Months in the Southern States, April-June 1863
  • This season, the unadorned look is more in vogue than ever in France.
  • Of course, we also got lucky because what we do is in vogue at the moment.
  • Bryant's book on mythology was then in vogue, and Bryant, in the fantastical manner so common in those days, found in Greek mythology what he called an arkite idolatry, pointing to Noah's deluge and the ark. Celtic Literature
  • This farrago of nonsense requires a very high standard of stylised comedy acting, which is not in vogue in the 21st Century.
  • Had frequent flyer points been in vogue from the beginning of his career, he would be able to take everyone in this room as his guest on the dream vacation of a lifetime. The Media's Role in Society: The Media Viewpoint
  • Bring it on because England are in vogue again. The Sun
  • Trends in gardening come and go, but individuality and aesthetics will always be in vogue.
  • churchwarden" or "yard of clay" which was not in vogue till the early years of the nineteenth century. The Social History of Smoking
  • I use the word conscripted purposely -- I know there is no such word in the English language -- neither is there any such word as conscribe, the one usually in vogue now a days. The Great Speech of Hon. A.H. Stephens, Delivered Before the Georgia Legislature, on Wednesday Night, March 16th, 1864, to which is Added Extracts prom [sic] Gov. Brown's Message to the Georgia Legislature.
  • Confusing films may be in vogue, but confusing does NOT equal incomprehensible.
  • It is an interesting to consider: what death practices with be in vogue as the world continues to shrink, blend, adapt and reinvent?
  • Quite how something so boring has remained in vogue for so long is a mystery. Times, Sunday Times
  • Simply put, parsimony is in vogue in boardrooms right now. Football's Level Playing Field
  • A natural system of conservancy was in vogue, almost every hill top is dedicated to some local deity and the trees on or about the spot are regarded with great respect so that nobody dare touch them.
  • Leondard Opdycke notes, "These devices [imprese] so much in vogue during the 16th century in Italy, were the 'inventions' which Giovio (ca. 1480) says 'the great lords and noble cavaliers of our time like to wear on their armour, caparisons and banners, to signify a part of their generous thoughts.' [fig. 4.16] They consisted of a figure or picture, and a motto nearly always in Latin" (Book of the Courtier, 329n40). Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
  • Observers say that the company fell victim to overexpansion during the days when the just-off-the-beach look was in vogue. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the whole, Brasini largely eschewed the 'futurism' in vogue during the Fascist period (and his career began and ended long before and after that era), and even submitted (for better or worse) some sketches for a competition to design a Palace of Soviets in Moscow. The Modern Baroque of Armando Brasini
  • Disaster movies and conspiracy theories are in vogue again, but they lack the urgency of their 1970s predecessors. Christianity Today
  • The combination of gold with creative materials, colourful precious stones and semi-precious stones is also very much in vogue.
  • I have been told that tonsillectomies are no longer in vogue. Times, Sunday Times
  • McClair was never a favourite of the fans, in part because he never threw himself into tackles or pandered to the crowd by kissing the jersey or blessing himself, which was, sadly, in vogue back then.
  • A lot of the goods, Emerald noticed, were flashier than those she had seen in Vogue. YELLOW BIRD
  • Later, at school in the fifties, G.K. Chesterton was very much in vogue.
  • France is the country where that sweet Christian institution of mariages de convenance (which so many folks of the family about which this story treats are engaged in arranging) is most in vogue. The Newcomes
  • -- Animism may have arisen out of or simultaneously with animatism as a primitive explanation of many different phenomena; if animatism was originally applied to non-human or inanimate objects, animism may from the outset have been in vogue as a theory of the nature of man. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 2, Part 1, Slice 1
  • Nowadays, with e-commerce in vogue, flowers, cards and all sorts of gifts can be purchased and dispatched through a wireless network to the other part of the world.
  • However, mothers and grannies of the bride need not be alarmed, as wraps, boleros and capes are very much in vogue for the service at least.
  • With the trend being high shine, anything that glows bright jewellery, bright colours, exotic florals, metallic stripes, bold prints, gleams and shimmers will keep you in vogue.
  • · Ebooks and digital publishing discussions were not as in vogue as at BEA. The British Hay Literary Festival (From Someone Who Wasn't There) - by Joanna Penn | The Creative Penn
  • However, he said, as part of the Government's commitment to urban generation, parks were in vogue again.
  • The correct view may well be that the pallium was introduced as a liturgical badge of the pope, and it does not seem improbable that it was adopted in imitation of its counterpart, the pontifical omophorion, already in vogue in the Eastern Church. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • It chose to build up its operations in cash equities trading and foreign exchange, which are now back in vogue. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such things, of course, because of the innate prejudice and hypocrisy of the liberal press, never get mentioned, since, no doubt, they are merely expressing their inner selves or whatever psychobabble is currently in vogue. Chav Hunts
  • Babi, a city-based designer, says embellished lowers, including salwars and churidars are in vogue in the city.
  • Preservation of old growth forest wasn't in vogue at the time, according to Graham.
  • The term extremism is currently in vogue to describe hate groups and other malcontents listed as such by knowledgeable monitors like SPLC and others in the T2A sidebar, but while we all know what ...... Talk To Action
  • It is a fairly laddy comic schtick, particularly in vogue at the moment, and it can often be used to disguise a burningly obsessive nature or a peculiar intellect. James Corden plans World Cup domination on TV and in the charts
  • A clerk announces that Candide will not be given a proper burial if he doesn't accept the religious practices in vogue at the time.
  • As narratives, these poems outmatch much of the recent crop of "flash fiction" currently in vogue on the prose side of the literary aisle. Small Press Poetry: A Summer Reading List
  • In fact, house rabbits are in vogue all over the world, ranking in ‘pet’ value along with domestic cats and dogs.
  • She may be cute, but the latest top model to make her debut in Vogue is also podgy with short legs and whiskers.
  • Utilitarian memorials, in Johnson's mind, were in vogue because they would guard against the great sin of traditional - that is, idle and idolatrous - memorials.
  • She may be cute, but the latest top model to make her debut in Vogue is also podgy with short legs and whiskers.
  • Reimagining Church notes that "the word missional is in vogue today in some Christian circles. The Blind Beggar
  • Outlining the trends of this season, Manu says long and short jacket in pastel shades with light embroidery are in vogue with bright electric ones for the flamboyant.
  • Little touches like the glass beaded lampshades (so currently in vogue) contribute to the overall sense of restrained luxury.
  • Long before the term blended family was in vogue, she had helped unite two families that had been touched by tragedy. We Remember - Ruth Segel, 1913 - 2007
  • Commercial property is also back in vogue with UK fund managers.
  • His lead: “Attention White House speechwriters: The term fast track is no longer in vogue.” No Uncertain Terms
  • When they got their first star, the cooking took on more avant-garde qualities, and then, when they moved to a new location, at the trendy Ohla Hotel in the Barri Gòtic, their direction shifted again – back to sturdy dishes made modern, from their signature tartar of smoked eel with herring caviar and confit of lamb neck, currently in vogue as the new onglet, to peas with cod tripe and sour apple. 10 of the best restaurants for new Catalan cuisine
  • Bellbottoms, beads and long hair will be back in vogue for a night of hippie nostalgia in the Ridgepool Hotel on Saturday night week next, October 30th.
  • Indian art definitely seems to be in vogue.
  • At one time these documents say that 20 young men left the University on account of the monitorial system then in vogue there and entered Dickinson's School. North Carolina Schools and Academies 1790-1840 A Documentary History
  • In fact, a lot of American things are still in vogue.
  • In the warring state period, toasting fork and walking rapier were in vogue with swordsmanship also gaining certain development.
  • Pale colours are much more in vogue than autumnal bronzes and coppers.
  • A sneaky peek into a life in Vogue. Times, Sunday Times
  • She calls a story in Vogue on "new ways" to carry a handbag "twaddle" and goes on to beseech, "Isn't it time they all tried a little bit harder to be on our side ...? Cathy Alter: In Defense of Women's Magazines
  • It's by one of those in vogue bands of the moment.
  • The designer's collection for this season has chiffons, georgettes, and voiles along with cotton, which is always in vogue.
  • He points out the shimmering red and gold curtains lining the kitchen door, a manifestation of the seraglio theme currently in vogue. THE SAVAGE GIRL
  • Public nudity is in vogue, and the practice of toplessness (and sometimes bottomlessness) extends from small-town teenage girls -- one was seen calling out, loudly, for the services of a body-painter -- to the 60-somethings clutching each other in a fully nude embrace at the "Polyamory Paradise" camp. Desert Wanderers Find Their Promised Land
  • The empire line is back in vogue after several decades, but it has always been a great style to flatter any figure.
  • The zamindari system is still in vogue in many parts.
  • The most available men for the purpose were, of course, those who had been accustomed to wiring for the simpler electrical systems then in vogue -- telephones, district-messenger calls, burglar alarms, house annunciators, etc., and a number of these ` ` wiremen '' were engaged and instructed patiently in the rudiments of the new art by means of a blackboard and oral lessons. Edison, His Life and Inventions, vol. 1
  • Agreeably to the doctrines of rhabdomancy, formerly in vogue, and at the present moment not entirely discarded, a twig, usually of witchhazle, borne over the surface of the ground, indicates the presence of water to which it is instinctively alive, by stirring in the hand. Margaret
  • Pythagorean esotericism has been a constant presence in Western thought since antiquity, but it was especially in vogue during the Renaissance, thanks to the rediscovery of a poem of “self-help” maxims written around the fourth century B.C. called the Golden Verses of Pythagoras. HERE’S LOOKING AT EUCLID
  • All they cared about was clothes and jewelry and being in vogue. Cooking classes.
  • Then all of a sudden the dot-bomb dropped, and suddenly medical devices and biologics were back in vogue.
  • Style has never been more in vogue, now that there's a recession to battle through and compose chin-juttingly gawjuss themes around. Arse End Of Ireland
  • In addition, they considered the surprising success of Mr. Marmaduke Fennel's eighteenth-century story, For Love of a Lady, as compared with the more moderate sales of Miss Elspeth Lancaster's In Scarlet Sidon, that candid romance of the brothel; deducing therefrom that the "gadzooks" and "by'r lady" type of reading-matter was ready to revive in vogue. The Cream of the Jest: A Comedy of Evasions
  • This week goo Ranking decided to report on what in vogue items or fashions from the 1980s do people get nostalgic about when they look back on them. All you ever wanted to know about Kinnikuman
  • In the late '80s, the miniskirt became very stylish, and nowadays, clothes that expose the shoulders, the back and sometimes the belly are in vogue.
  • Even at 82, Dr. Maya as I called her was as in vogue as any of the women who walked the treelined streets outside of her home. Cheryl Wills: Phenomenally Yours: A Sit-Down With Dr. Maya Angelou
  • So do I take it that at the launch of the Virdi inquiry very much that training was in vogue but now it has filtered off, or dwindled off?
  • If you've just spent time emulsioning your space in vogueish shades of cappuccino and hessian and are bewildered by this new passion for all things aquatic, blame him!
  • Craft and guile is back in vogue, with much power and timing dependent on the back five of the pack. Times, Sunday Times
  • We haven't had a real default since powdered wigs and tricornered hats were in vogue. In Debt-Ceiling Chicken, Markets Are Betting the Wrong Bird
  • This branch of lithography, which is nearly dependent on the efforts of the steel engraver, and has been in vogue for many years, principally in England, and of late introduced to this country, where it has met with very great success, is simply the transferring of impressions of engraved plates to stone, and printing from the transfer. Remarks on the Manufacture of Bank Notes, and Other Promises to Pay. Addressed to the Bankers of the Southern Confederacy.
  • We've already talked about people walking away from underwater mortgages, but it looks like good ol' fashioned long-term squatting might be back in vogue, since there is now plenty of property to walk in to. Nick Mamatas' Journal

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