English to Spanish Dictionary vogue

vogue

moda
definition
verb
I ‘ vogued ’ down the street and at parties with my friends.
dance to music in such a way as to imitate the characteristic poses struck by a model on a catwalk.
noun
the vogue is to make realistic films
the prevailing fashion or style at a particular time.
adjective
“citizenship” was to be the government's vogue word
popular; fashionable.
translation of 'vogue'
noun
boga,
moda
example
City living is back in 'vogue' .
His brilliant, fluid landscape sketches in oils and watercolour were inspirational and he helped create a 'vogue' for ‘troubadour’ subjects.
The 18th century experienced a 'vogue' for ‘sympathy’ or fellow-feeling, explored by Scottish Enlightenment thinkers such as David Hume and Adam Smith.
Sharp tailored suits are very much in 'vogue' at the moment.
The religious architecture of the twenties might have been dubbed the era of ‘more is more,’ long before ‘less is more’ became the 'vogue' .
Collectors and antiquarians were largely responsible for the 'vogue' for collecting antiquities that took root in the eighteenth century.
In each case any similar activity was subtly redefined to reinforce the apparent rise of the 'vogue' phenomenon.
However, he said, as part of the Government's commitment to urban generation, parks were in 'vogue' again.
Trends in gardening come and go, but individuality and aesthetics will always be in 'vogue' .
The current 'vogue' for silent film screenings accompanied by live music is truly international.
The military coup may be a thing of the past, but the popular coup is in 'vogue' .
There was a brief 'vogue' for black brick in the 60s, and all the buildings looked just like this.
Trips to India seem to be in 'vogue' with people I know.
Incentives were in 'vogue' even in the early 1950s.
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.
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' .
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.
Commercial property is also back in 'vogue' with UK fund managers.
It initiated a 'vogue' for revenge theatre that lasted for decades, and it shares many elements with the greatest of all revenge tragedies, Hamlet.
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.
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.
Apparently there was a 'vogue' for mandolins when she was a young girl, and she had one.
Masculine desperation is rapidly evolving into the 'vogue' cinematic theme of the new millennium.
The sensational painter of Biblical disasters, John Martin, was one of many who enjoyed a wide 'vogue' in reproduction.
She can rap, she can 'vogue' , she can do bondage and ballads, but one thing she can't be is clean-cut.
After his sojourn at Versailles, he brought with him a 'vogue' for French and Continental cuisine.
The 'vogue' notion at that time had been, of course, one of American decline, as popularized by Kennedy.
Of course, we also got lucky because what we do is in 'vogue' at the moment.
By the 1980s people were sick of chemicalised foods, and a 'vogue' for real bread, real beer and organic products grew up.
It's by one of those in 'vogue' bands of the moment.
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