| 11. | Home crafts like weaving were voguish in Hollywood in the 1950s; she gave him work teaching weaving.
|
| 12. | That was a double : The paper coupled the vogue word transparency with the even more voguish word issue.
|
| 13. | Until recently, it was voguish to call Rudolf crazy, in part because he loved art more than politics.
|
| 14. | Civic journalism, or public journalism as it is sometimes called, is a voguish new addition to the campaign scene.
|
| 15. | A store that still carries the original overhead sign " Louis Zuflacht-- Smart Clothes " actually sells voguish glassware.
|
| 16. | When U . S . managers latched onto Japanese techniques in the 1980s, just-in-time became a voguish mantra.
|
| 17. | Give the voguish jargon a little time; this anomie-tooism will pass because it is a highbrow term that lacks specificity.
|
| 18. | There is nothing voguish about the cooking or the presentation _ no tall food, no dusting of plates with paprika or powdered sugar.
|
| 19. | A voguish band of French intellectuals predict a coming clash with the all-devouring, all-knowing " hyperpower ."
|
| 20. | One of the reasons large companies are doing better is that they got religion in the 1990s, and it became voguish to cut costs.
|