单词 | vogue |
释义 | voguen.adj. A. n. I. Senses relating to popularity or esteem. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > quality of being approvable or acceptable > popularity > [noun] > greatest the vogue1571 (a) (b)c1610 J. Melville Mem. Own Life (1735) 380 Such scornful and such partial Persons, as have oftest possessed your Ear and carried the Vogue in your Court.1664 H. Power Exper. Philos. i. 47 Though Mustard-seed do carry the Vogue amongst the People.1698 J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 123 It bears the Vogue for altering the Blood.1722 W. Hamilton Life of Sir William Wallace 152 McFadzean that most bloody Rogue, Who for his Villany did bear the Vogue.1741 W. Oldys et al. Betterton's Hist. Eng. Stage i. 9 Notwithstanding the Industry of the Patentee and Managers, it seems the King's House then carried the Vogue of the Town.(c)1685 Choice Coll. Songs, ‘Fill up the Bowl’ v While you can find one Factious Rogue, To sway the Poll, and get the Vogue.c1700 J. M'Alpie Certain Curious Poems (1828) 6 For we declair it wnto yow, The man hes gott the wog.1710 J. Swift in J. Swift & R. Steele Tatler No. 230 Some of which [words] are now struggling for the Vogue, and others are in possession of it.1725 A. Ramsay Gentle Shepherd i. ii I'll..win the vogue at market, tron, or fair, For halesome, clean, cheap and sufficient ware.1732 J. Swift Beasts' Confession Pref. London is seldom without a dozen of their own educating, who engross the vogue for half a winter together.1571 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. xxvii. 123 Quha hes þe wogue [printed wogne], him all þe warld dois wew. c1590 J. Stewart Poems (1913) 12 As mychtie Monarck rair,..He onlie hes the vog armipotent. 1661 J. Howell Twelve Several Treat. 290 These are the men that now have the vogue, and..seem to have quite swallowed up both the King's Prerogatives, and those of the Lords. 1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe i. i. 17 Democritus having had for many Ages almost the general cry and vogue for Atoms. 1731 G. Medley tr. P. Kolb Present State Cape Good-Hope I. 65 They have the vogue above all the other Hottentot nations for strength and dexterity in throwing the Hassagaye. 1738 Observ. Brit. Wool 9 English Woollen Manufactures have had the Vogue and Name for many Years past, all over Europe. a1790 B. Franklin Autobiogr. (1981) iii. 154 The Abbé Nollet..had..publish'd a Theory of Electricity, which then had the general Vogue. 2. a. Without article: popularity; general acceptance or currency; success in popular esteem. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > quality of being approvable or acceptable > popularity > [noun] popularity1574 vogue1617 populacy1687 popular air1710 1617 T. Wilcocks in tr. P. de Mornay Trewnesse Christian Relig. (new ed.) Ded. Pr. Wales sig. A2v This booke being countenanced, vnder your Patronage and defence, shall haue more vogue, and better acceptance with all sorts. a1652 A. Wilson Hist. Great Brit. (1653) 121 So long as you permit the Schisms of Arminius to have such vogue..in the principal Towns of Holland. 1693 W. Freke Sel. Ess. Apol. sig. A4v An Author not Licens'd by Common Vogue, as well as Authority, looks like one with the Plague-sore upon him. 1704 J. Swift Tale of Tub vii. 141 Having observed how little Invention bears any Vogue, besides what is derived into these Channels. 1716 D. Waterland Serm. Univ. Cambr. 21 A good Man has no Security..but by examining carefully what is true, right, and just in it self, separate from common Vogue, or popular Opinion. 1752 D. Hume Ess. & Treat. (1777) I. 248 To convince you that fashion, vogue,..and law, were the chief foundation of all moral determinations. 1858 N. Hawthorne Jrnl. 3 Apr. in French & Ital. Notebks. (1980) iii. 153 Mr. Mozier..seems to have a good deal of vogue as a sculptor. 1879 F. W. Farrar Life & Work St. Paul I. vi. xix. 351 Astrologers, magians, soothsayers,..acquired such vogue, as to attract the indignant notice of both satirists and historians. b. in (also out of) vogue. Also with adjectives (usually intensive), as in full vogue, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > quality of being approvable or acceptable > popularity > popular [phrase] in (also out of) vogue1643 all the mode1651 much the mode1767 (a) (b)1687 A. Lovell tr. J. de Thévenot Trav. into Levant i. 101 Letters are in no vogue in that Country, and profound Ignorance reigns among them.1692 T. Sprat Relation Late Wicked Contrivance ii. 15 The Popish-Plot having been just before in full vogue there, as well as here.1741 W. Oldys et al. Betterton's Hist. Eng. Stage i. 8 During this Interval, many Plays were brought upon the Stage written in Heroic Rhime: and..in 1668..it became still in greater Vogue.1798 Anti-Jacobin 2 July 278/1 The following Popular Song is said to be in great vogue.1838 G. P. R. James Life & Times Louis XIV IV. 83 As the system of conversion [to the Roman Catholic faith] was at that time in high vogue.1643 King Charles I in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eng. Hist. (1824) 1st Ser. III. 297 Though Mars be now most in voag, yet Hymen may bee some tymes remembred. 1653 H. Cogan tr. F. M. Pinto Voy. & Adventures lix. 242 The Idol which is most in vogue amongst them, and most frequented. a1676 M. Hale Primitive Originat. Mankind (1677) ii. iv. 165 The same Words and Phrases that were not used, in former Ages, become in Fashion, Reputation and Vogue in another Age. 1726 J. Swift Gulliver II. iv. xii. 188 It is highly probable, that such Travellers..may, by detecting my Errors,..justle me out of Vogue, and stand in my Place. 1738 J. Swift Compl. Coll. Genteel Conversat. p. xlii My Book would be out of Vogue with the first Change of Fashion. 1747 Bp. J. Butler Serm. in Wks. (1874) II. 297 Corruptions of the grossest sort have been in vogue, for many generations. 1787 J. Bentham Def. Usury x. 98 A method pretty much in vogue, was, to let the Jews get the money..and then squeeze it out of them as it was wanted. 1820 W. Irving Sketch Bk. I. 274 The writers whom you suppose in vogue,..have long since had their day. 1842 J. H. Newman Parochial Serm. (ed. 2) V. ix. 141 The influence of some system of religion which is in vogue. 1879 R. A. Proctor Pleasant Ways Sci. ii. 30 The system of lunar weather wisdom in vogue to this day among seamen. c. to bring (also put, come, start, etc.) into (or in) vogue. ΚΠ 1694 J. Evelyn Diary (1955) V. 197 It had ben brought into vogue by Mr. Tabore an Apothecary. a1719 J. Addison Dialogues Medals in Wks. (1721) I. i. 439 To bring the study of Medals in vogue. 1750 Ld. Chesterfield Let. 22 Feb. (1932) (modernized text) IV. 1509 Without which they..would be vilified by those very gallantries which put them in vogue. 1768 A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued I. ii. 97 What would the mathematician give to know the newest fashions as they start into vogue, or be let into all the scandal and tittle tattle of the town? 1844 C. Thirlwall Hist. Greece VIII. lxii. 148 Austere doctrines..seem to have come into vogue in the higher circles. 1845 R. Ford Hand-bk. Travellers in Spain I. i. 13 Travelling in a carriage with post-horses was brought into vogue by the Bourbons. 1876 W. E. Gladstone Homeric Synchronism 134 It had still more recently come into vogue as the national name. d. to give vogue (to something). ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > fashionableness > [verb (transitive)] to give vogue1688 trendify1969 the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > quality of being approvable or acceptable > popularity > make popular [verb (transitive)] republicatea1670 to give vogue1688 vogue1709 popularize1793 1688 Bp. G. Burnet Enq. Reasons abrogating Test 7/1 The main things that gave it Popular Vogue and Reputation with his Party. 1770 T. Gray Let. 2 July in Corr. (1971) III. 1141 That childish nation, the French, have given him vogue and fashion. 1799 in Med. Jrnl. (1800) 3 14 Those artifices that have so often given Medical Men vogue in the great world. 1824 Ld. Byron Don Juan: Canto XV xlviii. 29 Although her birth and wealth had given her vogue Beyond the charmers we have already cited. 1837 H. Hallam Introd. Lit. Europe I. vii. 549 It contains several feigned letters of the emperor Marcus Aurelius, which probably in a credulous age passed for genuine, and gave vogue to the book. 1877 E. R. Conder Basis of Faith ii. 69 To give vogue to a phrase by which he hopes to make the idea..ridiculous. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > fashionableness > [adjective] in (also into) request?1574 bonfacion1584 fashional?1607 of request1613 fashionablea1627 à la mode1642 all the mode1651 modish1661 in mode1664 timeish1676 of vogue1678 voguea1695 mody1701 alamodic1753 much the mode1767 tonish1778 go1784 stylish1800 bang-up1810 tippy1810 varmint1823 up to the knocker1844 gyvera1866 OK1869 fly1879 swagger1879 doggy1885 faddy1885 fantoosh1920 voguish1927 voguey1928 à la page1930 go1937 hard1938 hip1939 down1952 swinging1958 a-go-go1960 way-in1960 yé-yé1960 trendy1962 with-it1962 go-go1963 happening1965 mod1965 funky1967 together1968 fash1977 cred1987 1678 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. IV iv. iii. iv. 137 Is it not strange then, that Reformed Divines, yea some of great vogue for Pietie and Learning should espouse an error so grosse. 1703 R. Steele Tender Husband i. i The Great Beauties, and Short-liv'd People of Vogue, were always her Discourse and Imitation. 1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 14. ⁋5 There are Two who frequent this Place, whom she takes for Men of Vogue. 3. a. With a: a prominent place in popular favour or fashion; a course or period of success or distinction in this connection. ΚΠ 1673 R. Allestree Ladies Calling i. v. §25 That impudence of profaneness which has given it such a vogue in the world. 1704 J. Swift Disc. Mech. Operat. Spirit in Tale of Tub 284 I do not find any [Title] which holds so general a Vogue, as that of, A Letter to a Friend. 1752 D. Hume Ess. & Treat. (1777) I. 248 Authority..may give a temporary vogue to a bad poet. 1753 W. Hogarth Anal. Beauty viii. 45 Paltry imitations of Chinese buildings have a kind of vogue, chiefly on account of their novelty. 1818 Sporting Mag. 3 118 The carriages called caterpillars acquired a temporary vogue. 1832 G. C. Lewis Remarks Use & Abuse Polit. Terms xiv. 136 A theory which, in its day, had a sufficient vogue to transfer its peculiar and technical expressions into common language. 1880 H. James Hawthorne 37 The Universal History had a great vogue and passed through hundreds of editions. b. In similar use with the or other limiting terms. ΚΠ 1645 J. Howell Epistolæ Ho-elianæ v. xxxiii. 37 The Lord Treasurer Weston is he who hath the greatest vogue now at Court, but many great ones have clash'd with him. 1674 R. Boyle Excellency Theol. ii. v. 202 The present success..ought not to make him so sure..that the same Opinions will be always in the same, or greater Vogue. 1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) 351 The Milesian Cloths had the greatest Vogue in the Greek Markets. 1708 O. Dykes Moral Reflexions Eng. Prov. 18 Prodigality is a jolly Vice, and of the most popular Vogue in the World. 1743 H. Fielding Jonathan Wild i. iv, in Misc. III. 23 Whisk and Swabbers was the Game then in the chief Vogue. 1834 T. B. Macaulay William Pitt in Ess. ⁋24 The vogue which it has obtained may serve to show [etc.]. 1881 Athenæum 15 Jan. 88/3 The vogue which mountaineering has acquired of late years. c. With possessives (or of). ΚΠ 1681 J. Oldham tr. Horace Art of Poetry in Some New Pieces never Publisht 7 Others..Shall be reviv'd, and come again in force, If custom please: from whence their vogue they draw. 1737 L. Clarke Compl. Hist. Bible II. vii. 316 James, in Regard of his great Vogue with the Populace for Sincerity, Virtue, and Judgment. 1771 T. Smollett Humphry Clinker II. 141 All these places (Bath excepted) have their vogue, and then the fashion changes. 1780 Miss Wilkes in Corr. J. Wilkes (1805) IV. 298 The vogue of this employment occasions a great many presents being made. 1835 Court Mag. 6 p. x/2 Tartan shawls have entirely lost their vogue; they are replaced by Egyptian shawls, which are now more fashionable than any other. 1855 N. Hawthorne in S. Longfellow Life H. W. Longfellow (1891) II. 287 No other poet has anything like your vogue. 1886 Church Times 730/1 Its defects, not its merits are the source of its vogue. II. Senses relating to natural or prevailing tendency; mode. a. Natural bent or capacity. Obsolete. rare. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > ability > [noun] > ability or talent enginea1393 virtuea1425 kindnessc1425 part1561 vogue1590 disposition1600 talent1602 genio1612 genius1649 turn1721 aptitude1793 1590 R. Williams Briefe Disc. Warre 25 If they finde any of great qualitie that carries a voge, to command popular or men of war. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > existence > state or condition > tendency > [noun] kinda1200 disposingc1380 disposition1393 aptc1400 hieldc1400 remotiona1425 inclination?a1439 incliningc1450 taste1477 intendment1509 benta1535 swing1538 approclivity1546 aptness1548 swinge1548 drift1549 set1567 addiction1570 disposedness1583 swaya1586 leaning1587 intention1594 inflection1597 inclinableness1608 appetite1626 vogue1626 tendency1628 tendence1632 aptitude1633 gravitation1644 propension1644 biasing1645 conducement1646 flexure1652 propendency1660 tend1663 vergencya1665 pend1674 to have a way of1748 polarity1767 appetency1802 drive1885 overleaning1896 1626 T. Hawkins tr. N. Caussin Holy Court I. 74 They seing all things are permitted them, do instantly take that vogue, which depraued nature doth present vnto them, they follow the track of pleasure. 1633 G. Herbert Bunch of Grapes in Temple i One vogue and vein, One aire of thought usurps my brain. 1647 W. Lilly Christian Astrol. cxiii. 543 The Native..shall live gallantly..above the ordinary Vogue of his Birth. 1660 J. Gauden Κακουργοι 76 They go with the vogue and stream of times. 1702 Eng. Theophrastus 195 Mens merit is generally judg'd of by the Vogue of the Fortune they are in. 1729 W. Law Serious Call xvii. 308 According to the spirit and vogue of this world, whose corrupt air we have all breath'd, there are many things that pass for great, and honourable. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > [noun] greennesseOE lustinessc1325 forcea1375 vigourc1386 virrc1575 vigour1602 nerve1605 vivacity1649 vis1650 actuosity1660 amenity1661 vogue1674 energy1783 smeddum1790 dash1796 throughput1808 feck1811 go1825 steam1826 jism1842 vim1843 animalism1848 fizz1856 jasm1860 verve1863 snap1865 sawdusta1873 élan1880 stingo1885 energeticism1891 sprawl1894 zip1899 pep1908 jazz1912 zoom1926 toe1963 zap1968 stank1997 1674 W. Lloyd Difference Church & Court of Rome 5 This is at large inculcated..with great vouge and ostentation by the Bishop of Condom. a. The approbation, approval, or popular favour of some class of persons, etc. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > [noun] > entertained by some class of persons vogue1606 1606 W. Birnie Blame of Kirk-buriall ix. sig. C3 For many to eternize their soone forgot memory, and to gaine the vogue of this vaine world, hes prepared Pyramides of pomp. a1657 G. Daniel Poems (1878) I. 75 Wouldst Thou wooe a Feature In a glasse?.. Or resigne what you may claime To the vogue of vulgar ffame. 1681 J. Chetham Angler's Vade Mecum x. Introd. 70 For that the Trout is the most Excellent Fish, by the Vogue of the most curious Palats. a1716 R. South 12 Serm. (1717) V. 65 A King..not owing his Kingdom to the Vogue of the Populace, but to the Suffrage of Nature. 1720 R. Welton tr. T. Alvares de Andrade Sufferings Son of God II. xx. 565 I would fain Recollect and Obtain the Universal Approbation and Vogue in my own Favour. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > rumour > [noun] speechc1000 wordOE hearinga1300 opinion1340 talesa1375 famea1387 inklinga1400 slandera1400 noising1422 rumour?a1425 bruit1477 nickinga1500 commoninga1513 roarc1520 murmura1522 hearsay?1533 cry1569 scandal1596 vogue1626 discourse1677 sough1716 circulation1775 gossip1811 myth1849 breeze1879 sound1899 potin1922 dirt1926 rumble1929 skinny1938 labrish1942 lie and story1950 scam1964 he-say-she-say1972 factoid1973 ripple1977 goss1985 the mind > mental capacity > belief > expressed belief, opinion > opinion held by group > [noun] voice?a1400 received opinion1440 vote1562 sense1563 minda1586 opinion1598 breath1610 vogue1626 climate1661 received idea1697 mass mind1922 idée reçue1933 mythology1949 1626 J. Mead Let. 24 July in R. F. Williams Birch's Court & Times Charles I (1848) (modernized text) I. 131 Some affirm the Earl of Suffolk..goes general of the fleet... Captain Pennington hath the vogue to go to his vice-admiral. 1661 Sir P. Tyrill in Essex Rev. (1909) XVIII. 95 The generall vogue of the towne is yt yesterday the Portugall match was agreed upon at the Counsell. 1685 J. Chamberlayne tr. P. S. Dufour Manner of making Coffee, Tea, & Chocolate 49 Indeed 'tis the common vogue and opinion of this Country, that there is nothing more Soveraign then this plant. 1721 J. Perry Acct. Stopping Daggenham Breach 79 The Opinion of my Assistants being urg'd, and the general vogue of Men that my Work was carried on in a sufficient Manner. 1730 J. Swift Let. to Gay 19 Nov. The vogue of our few honest folks here is that Duck is absolutely to succeed Eusden in the laurel. 6. a. The prevailing fashion or tendency; esp. that which is in favour at a particular time. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > fashionableness > [noun] > the or a prevailing fashion gentryc1400 the fashion1569 mainstream1599 the trim1603 mood1646 mode1649 vogue1649 beauty1653 à la mode1654 turn1695 the kick1699 goût1717 thing1734 taste1739 ton1769 nick1788 the tippy1790 twig1811 latest1814 dernier mot1834 ticket1838 kibosh1880 last cry1887 le (or the) dernier cri1896 flavour of the month (or week)1946 vague1962 1649 Εἰκων Βασιλικη (1662) xi. 46 The common Sewer or stream of the present vogue and humor. 1660 E. Stillingfleet Irenicum ii. vi. 266 If Jerome speak according to the general vogue, this solution may be sufficient. 1834 F. Marryat Peter Simple III. xxvii. 378 His mustachios, bad French, and waltzing..were quite the vogue. 1860 G. A. Sala Lady Chesterfield's Lett. Pref. p. iii An age when burlesque is the vogue. b. Without article or with a. ΚΠ a1699 W. Temple Ess. Health & Long Life in Wks. (1720) I. 283 As Diseases have changed Vogue, so have Remedies in my Time and Observation. 1737 H. Fielding Hist. Reg. 1736 iii. 27 There is a Vogue, my Lord, which if you will bring me into, you will lay a lasting Obligation on me. 1905 Westm. Gaz. 10 June 15/3 Others..at once took the thing up and made it a vogue. B. adj. adj. Fashionable; currently in vogue; esp. in vogue word. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > fashionableness > [adjective] in (also into) request?1574 bonfacion1584 fashional?1607 of request1613 fashionablea1627 à la mode1642 all the mode1651 modish1661 in mode1664 timeish1676 of vogue1678 voguea1695 mody1701 alamodic1753 much the mode1767 tonish1778 go1784 stylish1800 bang-up1810 tippy1810 varmint1823 up to the knocker1844 gyvera1866 OK1869 fly1879 swagger1879 doggy1885 faddy1885 fantoosh1920 voguish1927 voguey1928 à la page1930 go1937 hard1938 hip1939 down1952 swinging1958 a-go-go1960 way-in1960 yé-yé1960 trendy1962 with-it1962 go-go1963 happening1965 mod1965 funky1967 together1968 fash1977 cred1987 a1695 R. Howard & Duke of Buckingham Country Gentleman (1976) i. i. 66 Pox on your Bourdeaux, Burgundie..no more of these vogue names,..get me some ale. 1915 H. L. Wilson Ruggles of Red Gap (1917) iii. 49 Decidedly he was not vogue. His hat was remarkable, being of a black felt with high crown and a wide and flopping brim. 1926 H. W. Fowler Dict. Mod. Eng. Usage 697/1 Vogue-words. Every now & then a word emerges from obscurity, or even from nothingness or a merely potential & not actual existence, into sudden popularity. 1947 E. Partridge Usage & Abusage 351/1 Brave new world is perhaps as much a cliché as it is a vogue-term. 1958 Listener 16 Oct. 621/2 Psychosomatic is the vogue-word of today. 1960 E. Partridge Charm of Words i. 47 One of the main differences between vogue-phrase and cliché: the majority of clichés last for generations. 1972 P. D. James Unsuitable Job iii. 106 Typical of the worst kind of academic writing. Contempt for logic; a generous sprinkling of vogue names; spurious profundity. 1978 Forum on Med. Apr. 84/1 Clichés and vogue expressions are equally plentiful. 1981 W. Safire in N.Y. Times Mag. 22 Feb. 9/1 Vogue words are his specialty [sc. Alexander Haig's]. The academic joyword of the 70's was ‘exacerbate’. 1982 Sunday Times 5 Dec. 55 It was Chinese orders that made the mining machinery companies vogue stocks in the late seventies. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1920; most recently modified version published online December 2021). † voguev.1 Obsolete. 1. a. transitive. To cry up or down. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > commendation or praise > commend or praise [verb (transitive)] heryc735 mickleeOE loveOE praise?c1225 upraisea1300 alosec1300 commenda1340 allow1340 laud1377 lose1377 avauntc1380 magnifya1382 enhancea1400 roosea1400 recommendc1400 recommanda1413 to bear up?a1425 exalt1430 to say well (also evil, ill, etc.) of (also by)1445 laudifyc1470 gloryc1475 advance1483 to bear out1485 prizec1485 to be or to have in laudationa1500 joya1500 extol1509 collaud1512 concend?1521 solemnize?1521 celebrate1522 stellify1523 to set up1535 well-word1547 predicate1552 glorify1557 to set forth1565 admire1566 to be up with1592 voice1594 magnificate1598 plaud1598 concelebrate1599 encomionize1599 to con laud1602 applauda1616 panegyrize1617 acclamate1624 to set offa1625 acclaim1626 raise1645 complement1649 encomiate1651 voguec1661 phrase1675 to set out1688 Alexander1700 talk1723 panegyricize1777 bemouth1799 eulogizea1810 rhapsodize1819 crack up1829 rhapsody1847 the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrepute > damage to reputation > disparagement or depreciation > disparage or depreciate [verb (transitive)] littleeOE low1340 dispraisec1386 minish1402 deroge1427 detractc1449 descryc1450 detrayc1475 dismerit1484 decline1509 vilipend1509 disprize?1518 disable1528 derogatea1530 elevate1541 disparagea1556 detrect1563 debase1565 demerit1576 vilify1586 disgrace1589 detracta1592 besparage1592 enervate1593 obtrect1595 extenuate1601 disvalue1605 disparagon1610 undervalue1611 avile1615 debaucha1616 to cry down1616 debate1622 decry1641 atomize1645 underrate1646 naucify1653 dedignify1654 stuprate1655 de-ample1657 dismagn1657 slur1660 voguec1661 depreciate1666 to run down1671 baffle1674 lacken1674 sneer1706 diminish1712 substract1728 down1780 belittle1789 carbonify1792 to speak scorn of1861 to give one a back-cap1903 minoritize1947 mauvais langue1952 rubbish1953 down-talk1959 marginalize1970 marginate1970 trash1975 neg1987 c1661 in Harl. Misc. (1746) VIII. 31/2 He procured an awe and reverence to himself, being vogued up by the Clergy, and rendered to the Vulgar as a Pattern of Piety. 1710 T. Fuller Pharmacopœia Extemporanea 408 Thus may a good Medicine be vogu'd down by a groundless fancy! b. To bring into, or keep in, vogue. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > esteem > approval or sanction > quality of being approvable or acceptable > popularity > make popular [verb (transitive)] republicatea1670 to give vogue1688 vogue1709 popularize1793 1709 J. Reynolds Death's Vision Pref. 2 [That] those Poets shou'd be chiefly Applauded and Vogued, whose sole use of Religion..is to Undermine and Lampoon it. 2. To repute or reckon (as something). ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > judgement or decision > evaluation, estimation, appraisal > appraise, estimate [verb (transitive)] > consider to be, account as telleOE talec897 seeOE letc1000 holdc1200 reckon1340 aima1382 accounta1387 counta1387 judgec1390 takea1400 countc1400 receivec1400 existimatec1430 to look on ——?c1430 makec1440 reputea1449 suppose1474 treatc1485 determinea1513 recount?c1525 esteem1526 believe1533 estimate?1533 ascribe1535 consider1539 regard1547 count1553 to look upon ——1553 take1561 reck1567 eye?1593 censure1597 subscribe1600 perhibit1613 behold1642 resent1642 attributea1657 fancy1662 vogue1675 decount1762 to put down1788 to set down1798 rate1854 have1867 mean1878 1675 R. Burthogge Cavsa Dei 251 Pythagoras..might put this Honorary Mark upon the Ternary Number, and Vogue it Sacred and Divine. 1682 Heraclitus Ridens 25 July 2/1 Hellish Rage, which, forsooth, must be vogued Protestant Zeal. 1691 T. Hale Acct. New Inventions p. xlii Some who would take it ill not to be vogued for first-rate Politicians. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1920; most recently modified version published online December 2020). † voguev.2 Obsolete. rare. intransitive. To float. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > movement in or on water > move in or on water [verb (intransitive)] > move freely on surface wagc1325 floata1400 innate1670 vogue1687 1687 P. Rycaut Hist. Turkish Empire (new ed.) 316/1 in Knolles's Turkish Hist. (ed. 6) I. The Turks brake it [sc. the bridge] the preceeding day, letting the materials vogue with the stream into the Danube. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1920; most recently modified version published online June 2021). < n.adj.1571v.1c1661v.21687 |
随便看 |
|
英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。