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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.
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  • 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
  • Before the Civil War, boxing enjoyed a brief vogue in New York, where fighters often associated with the Tammany Hall machine rose to prominence.
  • He did fashion photography for Vogue magazine.
  • After his sojourn at Versailles, he brought with him a vogue for French and Continental cuisine.
  • TOKYO She may be cute, but the latest top model to make her debut in Vogue is also podgy with short legs and whiskers.
  • Vogue used to rent it for me. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dynamic football is more en vogue than dainty. Times, Sunday Times
  • The story might have him playing an effete easterner converted into a "real" American by the Old West, or demonstrating manly American virtues in decadent Europe or corrupt Latin America, or good-humoredly asserting American common sense in response to vogues like health faddism or pacifism, but in all these plots he was the exact same wholesome, attractive fellow he had always been. The Silent Superstar
  • There is something of a vogue at the moment for producing regional and global environmental histories.
  • It was in his time that the use of rosewater as a flavouring for food came into vogue in the lavish and sumptuous cuisine of the Arabs.
  • Ironically, at the very end of this millennium, demotions, warnings, and anathemas have again come into vogue in several regions of our nation.
  • The Leather Sofa Company is now the premier arena in the South East for leather sofas, suites, armchairs, recliners and the new vogue - suede and leather cube poufs.
  • While skintight leather leggings have been en vogue for a while, fashion editors and stylists are now wearing looser, tailored styles. Times, Sunday Times
  • She wore her new white piqué dress and bolero -- made by herself with a Vogue pattern -- of which she was very proud. THE GOLDEN LION
  • That monotony of form, those commonplace cadenzas, those endless bravura passages introduced at haphazard irrespective of the dramatic situation, that recurrent _crescendo_ that Rossini brought into vogue, are now an integral part of every composition; those vocal fireworks result in a sort of babbling, chattering, vaporous mucic, of which the sole merit depends on the greater or less fluency of the singer and his rapidity of vocalization. Gambara
  • The literary ghost story is in vogue at the moment and this one is beautifully done. Times, Sunday Times
  • While skintight leather leggings have been en vogue for a while, fashion editors and stylists are now wearing looser, tailored styles. Times, Sunday Times
  • Despite the vogue for so-called health teas, there is no evidence that they are any healthier.
  • A certain cant word called humbug had lately come into vogue. The Virginians
  • 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
  • Charles Churchwood, the author of the new book, is the former design director of Vogue and Vanity Fair magazines, two of Ritts's most important showcases, and he has pieced together a portrait of the portraitist from stories told by nearly 100 of the photographer's friends, relatives, lovers, and business associates. David Schonauer: How Herb Ritts Created the Idols We Deserved
  • Becoming an entrepreneur seems to be in vogue in this downturn.
  • Vogue asks the question on every fashionista's lips, "Are shoes the new It bags?".
  • 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
  • An imitated chemical fiber alpaca yam was developed to keep up with vogue and meet practicality.
  • In 1931 there were no medications to treat mental illness (lobotomies came into vogue in 1935, for example) and psychiatry was divided between those doctors treating state hospital patients (many of whom had paresis or were schizophrenic/bipolar) who were considered “organic” and those who were more psychoanalytic, mostly in big cities. The Volokh Conspiracy » Jerome Frank on Oliver Wendell Holmes:
  • There was a vogue for bidets in California some years ago but he thinks they are primarily symbolic as jacuzzis have become.
  • She's really set this new guideline, and I feel like the White House will never be the same after this somehow," said Gloria Baume, fashion director for Teen Vogue.
  • Dude" may have been made up "factitiously" (I'd like to know the dude who did it), but according to the O.E.D., it first came into vogue in New York about 1883, in connection with what the O.E.D. calls "the 'aesthetic craze' of the day. Dude, Where's My Dude ? Dudelicious Dissection, From Sontag to Spicoli
  • Mostly, the ‘girl crush’ seems to be a vogue phrase for something that has been around for a long time: a fawning but nonsexual interest one woman has in another.
  • 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-)
  • The postwar vogue for tearing down buildings virtually destroyed the city's architecture.
  • What became known as techno came from these weird parties full of nerdy cats and fashion slave kids – guys who wanted to emulate L'uomo Vogue magazine because fashion was their mode of rebellion. Mick Collins's Dirtbombs are in the Detroit mix
  • The collapse of western civilisation in technicolour. vogueboy Says: Geek Fashion Jewelry
  • Carlos Lamadrid , senior vice president of the Woman's Day Brand Group, said the inspiration came partly from seeing the exposure Vogue got when "Sex and the City" character Carrie Bradshaw became a writer at the fashion magazine. Media Shorts
  • The word brassiere first appeared in fashion bible Vogue a century ago. CNN Transcript Sep 29, 2007
  • 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.
  • That has come into vogue and you have players who used to be considered tweeners, really just undersized defensive ends, being projected to what is a need position now.
  • Vogue magazine quickly became the bible of fashionable women.
  • In a showroom dominated by a full-length mirror and vast photos of his clothes from the pages of Vogue, we drank endless cups of herbal tea, while Gibb and Bates smoked a chain of cigarettes.
  • The video also shows Gaga dressed in a latex nuns' outfit, suggestively swallowing a set of rosary beads, and appears to include references to Madonna's famous videos for Like A Prayer and Vogue.
  • Short skirts are very much in vogue just now.
  • Masculine desperation is rapidly evolving into the vogue cinematic theme of the new millennium.
  • The military coup may be a thing of the past, but the popular coup is in vogue.
  • There exist several extra-illustrated copies of this work which leads us to conclude that this large-paper extra-illustrated edition was an example of a publication for the grangerizing school of extra-illustration that had a vogue in the mid-nineteenth century.
  • 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
  • In next month's issue of Vogue magazine Parker claims that she may move to Ireland permanently with her husband.
  • The Dior scandal came a week after Vogue's profile of Syria's first lady, who is described as glamorous, young and very chic - "a rose in the desert. In fashion, global statements
  • The rapper looked at ease when yukking it up with Vogue Japan's editrix, Anna Dello Russo, in between shows or attending the Metropolitan Museum Gala with designer and "queen of Prep," Tory Burch, on his arm. Marjon Rebecca Carlos: Pret-a-Parler: Kanye's Debut Conversation With Style
  • leather is the latest vogue
  • And those buckles and studs nod at the current vogue for rock chic while being subdued enough for the school run. Times, Sunday Times
  • Fashion is the beacon of vogue, the pioneer in market, the disseminator of culture, and a significant existence in community orientation.
  • This novel had a great vogue ten years ago.
  • She became editor-in-chief at Vogue during the 1960s youthquake and helped evolve the fashion sense of the era.
  • Suddenly, every issue of Vogue had picture after picture of the most incredible person: coltish limbs, with a tiny face, retroussé nose, huge eyes and an adorable fringe.
  • Ever since Vogue homed in on it last December, the Wonderbra has been literally bouncing off the shelves.
  • 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
  • The editor of Vogue, Anna Wintour, is in dutiful attendance after controversially cutting her time short at the previous collections. Nicholas Kirkwood, British shoe designer, steps up to top role at Pollini
  • At our hotel, the Park Hyatt, syrniki arrived at the table studded with raisins and thick with cheese that retained its natural, curdy consistency, while at Vogue Café they were raisin-less, whipped and smoothed into delicate discs few Russian babushkas would recognize. Beyond Blini
  • It may be fashionable to go foreign but English managers are coming back en vogue. The Sun
  • A rummage through the Rigby & Peller archive, which is stored in silk-lined suitcases in an office above its Conduit Street store in Mayfair, shows that a lot has changed since Vogue coined the term "brassiere" in 1907. From corsets for comedians to bespoke bras: Rigby & Peller has seen it all
  • Willow or hazel panels are in vogue and give an informal, rustic feel. Times, Sunday Times
  • Once inside, the bedrooms will turn out to be, like the whole hotel, in the mode of plush Vogue Regency.
  • It's out of vogue at the moment but it's called liberal intervention. The Sun
  • Collectors and antiquarians were largely responsible for the vogue for collecting antiquities that took root in the eighteenth century.
  • In London it meant a new vogue for Scotch whisky and soda. PHYLLOXERA: How Wine was Saved for the World
  • High heels and high hopes have become vogue among teenage girls at Timbuktu's lone high school.
  • The combination of gold with creative materials, colourful precious stones and semi-precious stones is also very much in vogue.
  • Later he worked as a fashion photographer for Vogue, snapping a young Brigitte Bardot amongst others.
  • 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 Hyacinth enjoyed a vogue in the 18th and early 19th centuries, grown not only indoors and out but used as ornaments for women's fashions and even as a pharmaceutical.
  • The vitreous armrest stair of concise vogue, from deft and clean in oozy and contemporary succinct.
  • 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.
  • Now the vogue is for whizzy computer-assisted attribution studies. Times, Sunday Times
  • 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.
  • Maybe the attacks on the antimeaning helped; eventually, like most vogue phrases, it wore out its welcome. Visual Thesaurus : Online Edition
  • But what is the real impact on the home front of our obsession with fashionable and vogue trends?
  • On the February cover of Russian Vogue, a tousled blonde wears Ralph Lauren's bibbed denim version, neo-hippie accessorized with a gold woven bustier, a low-slung fringed belt and skin-baring provocative side curve. Overalls: Making A Comeback?
  • There is a parallel here with sensation fiction, another literary vogue of the 1860s and 1870s, in which criminality lurks beneath the surface decorums of daily life.
  • 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.
  • He did fashion photography for Vogue magazine.
  • 'Accountability' is the current vogue-word in politics.
  • This poet was the Russian spokesman of the so-called Weltschmerz (world-sorrow) which had come into vogue with the A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year Volume Two (of Three)
  • 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.
  • The popularity of the stage ballet intensified a vogue for social dancing and for the staging of private divertissements in the homes of the nobility and the bourgeoisie.
  • 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.
  • The late Middle Ages saw a vogue for embroidering underlinen - the shirt worn by both sexes of the wealthier classes.
  • Vogue used to rent it for me. Times, Sunday Times
  • Polish stunner, Anja Rubik opened the show in an oversized leather jacket and pencil skirt ensemble that reminded me of Former French Vogue's EIC, Carine Roitfeld's dark, chic, and very Parisian aesthetic. Marjon Rebecca Carlos: Pret-a-Parler: Kanye's Debut Conversation With Style
  • He was struck, not only by her confidence, but by what Vogue magazine called "the kind of looks usually reserved for a James Bond villainess".
  • She'd invented a character the public loved - a magic voice, a face from Vogue, and a giggly girl-next-door speaking voice.
  • Maybe it's become en vogue in this country too. Times, Sunday Times
  • In each case any similar activity was subtly redefined to reinforce the apparent rise of the vogue phenomenon.
  • It is now the premier arena in the South East for leather sofas, suites, armchairs, recliners and the new vogue - suede and leather cube poufs.
  • Community" is one of the vogue words of the new government.
  • The Castle of Otranto" began the vogue for Gothic romance novels.
  • LEGENDRE in VIGOUROUX, Dict. de la Bible (1891), s.v.; DE VOGUEE, La The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
  • I also did canoeing, and recall being only slightly scared by my initial capsize down a Garavogue weir.
  • Cheery views such as this are out of vogue and easy enough to dismiss as the ravings of a serial optimist.
  • She's really set this new guideline, and I feel like the White House will never be the same after this somehow," said Gloria Baume, fashion director for Teen Vogue.
  • 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
  • In the new age of indie vogue, film festivals - once rare and vital vehicles for showcasing independents - are now a dime a dozen.
  • The sensational painter of Biblical disasters, John Martin, was one of many who enjoyed a wide vogue in reproduction.
  • 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.
  • The religious architecture of the twenties might have been dubbed the era of ‘more is more,’ long before ‘less is more’ became the vogue.
  • 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
  • 'Accountability' is the current vogue-word in politics.
  • Her work for iD, Italian Vogue, and W Magazine reveals a talent in ascendance within the sphere of fashion photography. Boing Boing: December 3, 2006 - December 9, 2006 Archives
  • This new vogue in imagery has yet to trickle down, but it will. Times, Sunday Times
  • She opened her tote (woven rattan, a knock-off on the latest Newport style) and flipped through her now well-worn Vogue, focused on the society snapshot pages.
  • In the 18th and 19th centuries, there was a vogue for the building of follies on the estates of landowners.
  • “American Nervousness” incentennial ofChina’s Open Door treaty withculture ofeducation inin 1870Gilded Age avarice inlecture circuit inliterature ofnewspapers inpsychic loneliness ofracism inreligion inscience vogue insophistication ofin Spanish-American Warsports inUnited States Gazette Mark Twain
  • 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
  • There's also a vague vogue for the thonged flip-flop.
  • With the 3.9iSE Vogue, the Range Rover continues happily to wear the crown.
  • The three lounge-suits of tweed, though slightly demoded, would still be vogue in this remote spot. Ruggles of Red Gap
  • 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
  • Cycling enjoyed a vogue at the end of the nineteenth century.
  • All the mod clothes in vogue? Times, Sunday Times
  • Who better to appreciate one outrageous ride that lets you adventure all day and vogue all night, with barely a car wash in between?
  • So what does a duchess wear on the cover of Vogue? Times, Sunday Times
  • Incentives were in vogue even in the early 1950s.
  • A shopgirl in a slim dress with a mandarin collar stood behind the counter leisurely munching her way through a bag of pork rinds while flipping through Vogue. Slice Of Cherry
  • Wise young chanteuses seem to be very much in vogue right now.
  • Borrow has resuscitated a literary form which had been many years abandoned, and he has resuscitated it in no artificial manner -- as a rhythmical form is rehabilitated, or as a dilettante re-establishes for a moment the vogue of the roundel or the virelay -- but quite naturally as the inevitable setting for a picture which has to include the actors and the observations of the author's vagabond life. Isopel Berners The History of certain doings in a Staffordshire Dingle, July, 1825
  • 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
  • Never failing to keep booties shaking, she's rocked parties from the VH1 / Vogue Fashion Awards to ESPN's X Games awards.
  • Colleagues in the fields of literature and film will likewise draw our attention to the vogue for sequels and prequels based on works written by others long after the involvement of the original author.
  • The cholos baptized their clubs in Spanish, just because the banda was in vogue.
  • Since the vogue for chinoiserie included keeping exotic animals, the manufacture of porcelain animals is understandable.
  • Staying put may now be in vogue, but it is not always voluntary. Times, Sunday Times
  • But what is the real impact on the home front of our obsession with fashionable and vogue trends?
  • 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.
  • While skintight leather leggings have been en vogue for a while, fashion editors and stylists are now wearing looser, tailored styles. Times, Sunday Times
  • 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
  • Even Hegel has a vogue from time to time, though he is famous for being impossible to read.
  • It is interesting to read so early a bitter criticism of the famous "Theriaca," a great compound medicine invented by Antiochus III, which had a vogue for fifteen hundred years. The Evolution of Modern Medicine
  • She has since gone on to feature in high-profile ad campaigns and has appeared on the front cover of Vogue magazine. The Sun
  • Colleagues in the fields of literature and film will likewise draw our attention to the vogue for sequels and prequels based on works written by others long after the involvement of the original author.
  • Short hair came back into vogue about ten years ago.
  • It may be that with the present trend towards measurement numerical classifications will come back into vogue.
  • Serving these constituencies—the historiographical equivalent of the “identity politics” vogue—may carry a certain moral value, but it does little to advance our understanding of the chaotic events and pivotal decisions that gave rise to the first democracy of the modern era. Robert Morris
  • The Dior scandal came a week after Vogue's profile of Syria's first lady, who is described as glamorous, young, and very chic -- "a rose in the desert. Fashion don'ts: John Galliano fired for anti-semitic rant, Vogue gets slammed for puffy profile of Syria's first lady
  • Meanwhile, Vogue dresses Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in pretty clothes and claims that she could never, ever wear such things in "fuddy-duddy" D.C. Our critic Robin Givhan calls out Vogue (and maybe Gillibrand?), saying there's "nothing career-damaging, gossip-worthy or problematic" by D.C. standards in the senator's fashion-spread clothes, and in fact, plenty of women here dress like that, so get over yourself, New Yorkers. Read this: Katie O'Malley on Kendel Ehrlich, and vice versa; Kirsten Gillibrand's clothes
  • For his own part, Adams inclined to think that neither chaos nor death was an object to him as a searcher of knowledge, —neither would have vogue in America, —neither would help him to a career. Dilettantism (1865–1866)
  • Three Random Words: une estrade (f) = platform le saindoux (m) = lard voguer = to drift, to wander in Characters, Kindness of strangers | Permalink Characters
  • Your remarks on the vogue for the term film noir seem to imply that it was casually created by a bunch of movie critics operating in their pretentious twit mode. No Uncertain Terms
  • 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.
  • The first is the title track, a rocky soul belter which sounds very similar indeed to En Vogue's imperious ‘Free Your Mind’ and is nearly as rousing.
  • 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
  • Like famously, another vogue term savaged here six years ago, it marches on. The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
  • The editrix of British Vogue joined the cream of British womanhood Women Achievers who lunched with Queen Elizabeth on March 11th.
  • Vermicelli noodles were first brought from Italy, where the food was in 'great vogue'; it was chiefly used in soups and pottages, 'to provoke venery' or sexual gratification.
  • When record companies started producing CDs, audio tape was the vogue and the production of CDs, a limited commodity, was more expensive.
  • 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
  • I ‘vogued’ down the street and at parties with my friends.
  • To be honest, when I first got involved with the show, it wasn't really vogue or cool to be an analyst on TV.
  • An imitated chemical fiber alpaca yarn was developed to keep up with vogue and meet practicality.
  • Florida is responsible for the vogue notion that the growth and prosperity of modern cities are fuelled by the ‘creative class’, and the extent to which a city caters for their tastes and interests.
  • 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
  • In that time, we have seen granite worktops, wenge-fronted cabinets and monolithic stainless-steel stoves come into vogue. Times, Sunday Times
  • The ascendancy of the Steichen sensibility emerged only in the 1940s, when the precisionist-inspired realism of John Rawlings, whose crisply defined color images, at once sharp and subtle (Dahl-Wolfe was his closest counterpart), showed the dress with more clarity and detail than had any previous Vogue photographer. “Show the Dress”
  • 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
  • It's a decision which is already proving problematic according to Carine Roitfeld, former editor of French Vogue. Battle to fill disgraced Galliano's shoes at Dior reaches a climax
  • Tracks from his new album contain cello samples and references to Italian Vogue. Kanye West: Mister Perfection is stylishly reinventing the rules of rap
  • 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)
  • You catch up on movies, read trash and get tucked in by nice young men who offer you Vogue
  • 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.

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