vogue

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. The prevailing fashion or style.
  2. Popularity or a current craze.
  3. A highly stylized modern dance that evolved out of the Harlem ballroom scene in the 1960s.
  4. A cigarette.
verb
  1. To dance in the vogue dance style.
  2. To light a cigarette for (someone).
name
  1. A fashion and lifestyle magazine.
name
  1. A hamlet in St Day parish, east of Redruth, Cornwall, England (OS grid ref SW7242).

Pronunciation

vōg /vəʊɡ/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-vogue.wav

Word forms

vogue vogues voguing vogued

Etymology

First attested in 1565. Borrowed from Middle French vogue (“wave, course of success”), from Old French vogue, from voguer (“to row, sway, set sail”), from Old Saxon wogōn (“to sway, rock”), var. of wagōn (“to float, fluctuate”), from Proto-Germanic *wagōną (“to sway, fluctuate”) and Proto-Germanic *wēgaz (“water in motion”), from Proto-Germanic *weganą (“to move, carry, weigh”), from Proto-Indo-European *weǵʰ- (“to move, go, transport”) (compare way). Akin to Old Saxon wegan (“to move”), Old High German wegan (“to move”), Old English wegan (“to move, carry, weigh”), Old Norse vaga (“to sway, fluctuate”), Old English wagian (“to sway, totter”), German Woge (“wave”), Swedish våg (“wave”). More at wag. The dance derives its name from Vogue magazine.

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