0 a fashion or general liking, especially one that is temporary:
The postwar vogue for tearing down buildings virtually destroyed the city's architecture.
The short hemline is very much in vogue (= fashionable) this spring.
"Community" is one of the vogue words of the new government.
1 the state of being popular or fashionable for a period of time:
[ U ] Bowling has come back in vogue.
The current vogue for marketing hype often lets products down.
Related to the orientation toward studio production, and to the relatively late emergence of a local sound, was the vogue of cover versions.
Such a move would surpass the current vogue of 'research-fordevelopment', which still assumes the research is at centre stage.
The dual phantom of the side-by-side complex cussedness and orderliness of nature has been in vogue from early times.
Some of the extreme examples of thought experiments that have come into vogue in personal identity theory have even generated criticism within academic philosophy.
The temptation was strong, therefore, to take advantage of the vogue for blues in order to make a better living.
These are by no means all retired people, but their experience helps to account for the current vogue.
To this end, a philosophy of self-help, in vogue at the time, was consciously and consistently employed.
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