1. vogue - Noun
2. vogue - Verb
3. Vogue - Proper noun
The way or fashion of people at any particular time; temporary mode, custom, or practice; popular reception for the time; -- used now generally in the phrase in vogue.
Influence; power; sway.
Source: Webster's dictionaryIf Botticelli were alive today he'd be working for Vogue. Peter Ustinov
Suicide, moreover, was at the time in vogue in Paris: what more suitable key to the mystery of life for a skeptical society? Honoré de Balzac
Most people know no other way of judging men's worth but by the vogue they are in, or the fortunes they have met with. François de La Rochefoucauld
Far from participating in a current literary scene agog with vogue and hyperbole, the LRB has kept what is widely perceived as a mandarin aloofness from it. Complicity with the institutions of literature, whether patrons or advertisers, is scarcely a charge that can be made against the paper. Perry Anderson
I don't know if I am wrong, but singing slightly out of sur is also in vogue these days. And these pelvic movements and gestures are too much for me. Vyjayanthimala
I was asked to be in Vogue but I said no. I didn't want to advertise make-up. I didn't want to be seen as a sex symbol. Francesca Annis