0 a fashion or general liking, especially one that is temporary: --
"Community" is one of the vogue words of the new government.
The short hemline is very much in vogue (= fashionable) this spring.
The postwar vogue for tearing down buildings virtually destroyed the city's architecture.
1 the state of being popular or fashionable for a period of time: --
[ U ] Bowling has come back in vogue.
A comparison with languages which have had a vogue in the past is bound to be conjectural, not subject to empirical verification.
In practice, it has been the one in current vogue.
This latter, a common feature on early modular synthesizers, is a device that enjoyed a degree of vogue in the late 1960s.
However, with the recent re-emergence of interest in network models of the brain, functional connectivity is once again in vogue.
These songs at one time enjoyed something of a vogue in music classrooms.
Dying is recognized as a subject of ultimate seriousness, and yet it is a vogue topic as well, with all the attendant follies.
Discussions of vogues and contexts might allow us to get some way past this subjectivity.
To this end, a philosophy of self-help, in vogue at the time, was consciously and consistently employed.