vogue 的定义
- something in fashion, as at a particular time: Short hairdos were the vogue in the twenties.
- popular currency, acceptance, or favor; popularity: The book is having a great vogue.
vogue 近义词
fashionable
fashion; current practice
更多vogue例句
- Models of gargantuan proportions—trained on billions of data points for several days—are in vogue, and likely won’t be going away any time soon.
- Click here to view a large version of the chartBefore cigarettes came into vogue, this malady was rare.
- Sample return missions are becoming increasingly in vogue, as evidenced by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission and China’s current Chang’e 5 drilling operation on the moon.
- The reason we even have players such as Mack is because the 3-4 outside linebacker became en vogue roughly 40 years ago.
- As BofA equities analysts noted in a report on Friday, “long-term fundamental investing is out of vogue, but may be the best arbitrage opportunity out there.”
- Jourdan Dunn is the first sole black woman to feature on a British ‘Vogue’ cover in 12 years.
- When it was announced that Jourdan Dunn would be the first black model to cover British Vogue in twelve years it made me sad.
- Someone recently sent me an old Joan Didion essay on self-respect that appeared in Vogue.
- Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of American Vogue, once worked there.
- But the Madonna videos—particularly “Express Yourself” and “Vogue”—are uniquely spectacular.
- Fern cases were very much in vogue some years ago, and this is really a very delightful way of cultivating the plants.
- Nicknames among this class of poor whites in the South seem singularly like those in vogue in New England.
- In Parliament, where of course the old costly fashions have long been out of vogue, the change is equally noticeable.
- First, the introduction of pistons, inserted between the key-slips, which replaced the clumsy composition pedals then in vogue.
- This method is in vogue in some sections, because still less money is required to keep property insured.