Vogue in spanish
Moda
pronunciation: moʊdɑ part of speech: noun
pronunciation: moʊdɑ part of speech: noun
In gestures
vogue1 = boga, moda.
Example: In the mid-sixties, flowing hair and beards and hirsuteness in general became a vogue for the dissident young who wanted to 'let it all hang out'.more:
» come into + vogue = ponerse de moda.
Example: It has thus contributed to the cause of 'universal bibliographic control' long before this phrase came into vogue.» drop out of + vogue = pasar de moda.
Example: As a word drops out of vogue, the concept that it represents will, with time, gradually be described by a new term.» fall out of + vogue = pasar de moda.
Example: He points out that these metaphors fell out of vogue in the early 1980s.» go out of + vogue = pasar de moda.
Example: The name 'Canaan', never very popular, went out of vogue with the collapse of the Egyptian empire.» in vogue = en boga, de moda.
Example: The third proposal, still in vogue, is to enter all serials uniformly under their titles.» lose + Posesivo + vogue = pasar de moda, quedarse obsoleto.
Example: Literature can never, it is true, become extinct, but it can lose its vogue, it can become the almost exclusive possession of scholars, it can cease to be.» out of vogue = obsoleto, pasado de moda.
Example: In general, however, the author's approach to his comparative method -- that comparativism is out of vogue -- is rather parochial.vogue2 = popularidad, aceptación popular.
Example: Although presently seen as an exclusive possession of white tradition, square dancing has also had its vogue among blacks.