Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Definitions

vogue

[vohg] / voʊg /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

And while he boasts of his strong aesthetic sense—trained as a physicist, he left the field in the 1970s “nauseated” by the “hideously ugly” ideas then coming into vogue—his eye is suspect.

From The Wall Street Journal

She also delighted in “any thing ridiculous,” such as the vogue for luxurious rustic cottages and fake Gothic ruins.

From The Wall Street Journal

Always ahead of the curve, LeCun studied machine learning before it was en vogue.

From The Wall Street Journal

The AI-trade, led by Nvidia, was back in vogue to start the week after a recent beat down, but signs of stress from CoreWeave seem to be weighing on sentiment for Tuesday.

From MarketWatch

“Baseball is still a nineteenth-century construct,” she writes, “born at a time when pocket watches were still in vogue.”

From Salon