[ US /ˈvoʊɡ/ ]
[ UK /vˈə‍ʊɡ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the popular taste at a given time
    the 1920s had a style of their own
    he followed current trends
    leather is the latest vogue
  2. a current state of general acceptance and use
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How To Use vogue In A Sentence

  • Vogue was feeling peckish, so had a couple of mini croissants and an orange juice. The Sun
  • _Catty. _ (_speaking very rapidly_) Bless you for that word, counshillor; and by the first light to-morrow, I'll drive all the grazing cattle, every four-footed _baast_ off the land, and pound 'em in Ballynavogue; and if they replevy, why I'll distrain again, if it be forty times, I will go. Tales and Novels — Volume 08
  • 'I read it in a book.' 'What book?' 'Vogue, that's what book.'
  • City living is back in vogue.
  • But come Saturday night, they gather in Johannesburg basements, decked out to the nines and stylishly vogue like New York fashionistas.
  • Whale butt" ... hahaha, I completely agree, but then wale butts seem to be en vogue now, don't they? Modest Feminine Dress From the Pages of 1990 Victoria Magazine
  • Vogue magazine called Las Hadas "a delicious dream ... the world's ultimate playland. Bob Schulman: The Magic of Manzanillo
  • Who would have thought in the age of grime and dubstep that ballroom dancing would glide back into vogue? Times, Sunday Times
  • 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
  • While skintight leather leggings have been en vogue for a while, fashion editors and stylists are now wearing looser, tailored styles. Times, Sunday Times
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