Vogue in spanish

Moda

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.

Vogue synonyms

style in spanish: , pronunciation: staɪl part of speech: noun trend in spanish: , pronunciation: trend part of speech: noun currency in spanish: , pronunciation: kɜrənsi part of speech: noun
Follow us