Vogue
in sentence
70 examples of Vogue in a sentence
These proposals, once in great vogue, have receded.
Moreover, the ideological extremes that excited and polarized the continent back then are hardly in
vogue
today.
Currency boards and even dollarization are both now in
vogue.
Later, suicides became routinely described as "non-accidental overdoses," and the broad-spectrum term "emotional lability" came into vogue, despite its inability to distinguish between a drug-induced suicide attempt and an outburst of tears.
The term “awash with liquidity” was last in
vogue
just before the US stock market crash of October 19, 1987, the biggest one-day price drop in world history.
More recently, the idea of a "European identity" has been in
vogue.
The
vogue
for referendums today reflects distrust of political representatives.
But, since the growth model in
vogue
at the time laid principal emphasis on capital accumulation, China was widely held to have the advantage, because it could raise its investment rate higher than India, where democracy limited the extent to which the population could be taxed to increase domestic savings.
Now, thanks to the recent success of China and other emerging economies, national planning, industrial strategy, and state ownership of strategic industries are back in
vogue.
Reviving a Policy MarriageWASHINGTON, DC – Not long ago, the separation of financial supervision and monetary policy was in
vogue
in many countries.
What is the difference then between these talking therapies and the
vogue
for debriefing?
The Myth of Organic AgricultureSTANFORD – Organic products – from food to skin-care nostrums to cigarettes – are very much in vogue, with the global market for organic food alone now reportedly exceeding $60 billion annually.
Counter-cyclical fiscal policy was not yet in
vogue
– John Maynard Keynes’ General Theory was published only in 1936 – while the Gold Standard rendered monetary policy worse than useless.
Meanwhile, in developed capital markets, we are busily reinventing these “macroprudential instruments,” to use the term now in
vogue
in Basel.
The Siren Song of Capital ControlsITHACA, NEW YORK – Capital controls are back in
vogue.
Likewise, the pursuit of hard caps for CO2 emissions and stricter environmental and social standards to reduce natural-resource consumption and protect workers seems to have fallen out of vogue, with crisis-stricken economies concerned that such regulations would impede investment and trade.
Migration-related treaties have been out of
vogue
for decades, especially among destination countries.
Perhaps those are ideas en
vogue
in Korea as it thinks about a possible unification, but even there it will be hard to accomplish when the time comes.
Those who agree that the cost of dismantling the euro is too high to contemplate are being forced into a species of wishful thinking that is now very much in vogue, especially after the election of Emmanuel Macron to the French presidency.
In any case, two ethical concepts come to mind, neither of which is much in
vogue
these days when talking about government: responsibility and honor.
Likewise, the notion of “strategic autonomy,” currently in
vogue
in Germany and France, is a recipe for European division, because it implies that there are issues on which the EU might break with the US.
Broadening corporations’ definitions of their purpose and responsibilities toward stakeholders, and focusing on the stewardship responsibilities of institutional investors and asset managers – both remedies currently in
vogue
among corporate executives and policymakers – is insufficient.
If we took the three militaristic terms in
vogue
at face value, we might infer that a country with sufficient financial power first weaponizes its own currency, and then launches a speculative attack against that of a rival.
In fact, while the reforms that are needed are radical and sweeping, they are not the ones currently in
vogue.
A wealth tax is much in
vogue
today.
By contrast, developing countries’ comparative advantage is low-cost labor, and they should not seek to mimic the services-led growth strategy in
vogue
in advanced economies without having the skills base to sustain it.
Today, tariff and non-tariff barriers are in
vogue
again, partly because large bilateral trade imbalances, beyond a certain level, inevitably seem to trigger a reflex among some policymakers to shield domestic markets for the benefit of home producers and their employees (often regionally concentrated).
Certain things which Napoleon says of women, various discussions of the merits of the novels in
vogue
during his reign, furnished him now, for the first time, with several ideas which would long since have been familiar to any other young man of his age.
However, even inquests went out of
vogue
at last, and ceased to torture Tom's conscience.
To which Don Quixote replied, "Thou must know, friend Sancho Panza, that it was a practice very much in
vogue
with the knights-errant of old to make their squires governors of the islands or kingdoms they won, and I am determined that there shall be no failure on my part in so liberal a custom; on the contrary, I mean to improve upon it, for they sometimes, and perhaps most frequently, waited until their squires were old, and then when they had had enough of service and hard days and worse nights, they gave them some title or other, of count, or at the most marquis, of some valley or province more or less; but if thou livest and I live, it may well be that before six days are over, I may have won some kingdom that has others dependent upon it, which will be just the thing to enable thee to be crowned king of one of them.
Back
Related words
Which
There
About
Would
Their
While
Today
People
Other
Films
Currently
Between
Being
According
World
Still
Since
Shall
Perhaps
Movie