What's the difference between bogue and vogue?

Bogue


Definition:

  • (v. i.) To fall off from the wind; to edge away to leeward; -- said only of inferior craft.
  • (n.) The boce; -- called also bogue bream. See Boce.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In all the preparations tested DAPI consistently stained nuclei in the ganglion cell layer, and three levels of nuclei could be observed from IPL (inner plexiform layer) to INL (inner nuclear layer) in the bogue, goldfish and frog retinae.
  • (2) Total lipids from liver, head, skin and muscle of Bogue were separately isolated and their composition was investigated by a combination of analytical determinations, and column and thin layer chromatography.
  • (3) Bogue donated it in 1916 to the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington.
  • (4) Ever since the announcement of her detention on suspicion of murdering Neil Heywood , officials have referred to her as "Bogu Kailai", in what some have seen as a hint she had obtained foreign residency or even a foreign passport.
  • (5) This exceptional medical document was designed by a Parisian dentist, J. Porter Michaels and was brought to the United States by Edward A. Bogue, an American dentist who worked in Paris.
  • (6) Bogue, Skid Row in American Cities, University of Chicago Press, for a comprehensive definition of these areas) than in a comparison group that did not experience meningococcal disease (61%), suggesting that their presence may be associated with resistance to acquisition of meningococci or to meningococcal disease.
  • (7) It is not clear why the agency referred to Gu as "Bogu", which is not normal practice on the mainland.
  • (8) "According to investigation results, Bogu Kailai, wife of comrade Bo Xilai, and their son were on good terms with Heywood.
  • (9) "The existing evidence indicated that Heywood died of homicide, of which Bogu Kailai and Zhang Xiaojun, an orderly at Bo's home, are highly suspected."

Vogue


Definition:

  • (n.) 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.
  • (n.) Influence; power; sway.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Photograph: Rex Features 'Voga' Vogueing + yoga, apparently.
  • (2) When Guillem was approached by French Vogue to be photographed seven years ago she was presented with a clutch of the world's best fashion photographers to choose from.
  • (3) Compare her with Megan Draper, who is in a minidress too, but one that is several inches shorter and boasts the swirling lava-lamp prints that may have been seen in Vogue at the time.
  • (4) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Global trade unions called the collapse ‘mass industrial homicide’, while Vogue magazine described it as ‘tragedy on an epic scale’.
  • (5) Certain terminologies in vogue add further to the confusion.
  • (6) I drive past buildings that I know, or assume, to house bedsits, their stucco peeling like eczema, their window frames rattling like old bones, and I cannot help myself from picturing the scene within: a dubious pot on an equally dubious single ring, the female in charge of it half-heartedly stirring its contents at the same time as she files her nails, reads an old Vogue, or chats to some distant parent on the telephone.
  • (7) With her first book, Girl Online, due out in November and an audience estimated to be 26 times that of the circulation of British Vogue, Zoella is a key example of what the advertising world call a “crowdsourced people’s champion” – one who earns hundreds of thousands of pounds a year and is paid by brands such as Unilever to connect with the ever-elusive 18-30 demographic.
  • (8) Surely this is the only possible reaction to the October issue of French Vogue in which the 25-year-old Dutch Model Lara Stone has been blacked up.
  • (9) 8-Methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) (currently in vogue for the treatment of psoriasis) is a well-known photosensitizing agent.
  • (10) The ready recourse to these grafts, so much in vogue at the present time in primary rhinoplasties, should be carefully and completely re-examined, since the final result very frequently yields no real benefits and may permanently deface the area from which the cartilage has been taken.
  • (11) The following day, politicians and eurocrats began scrambling to hammer out a larger rescue package for Greece: 28 April 2010 Photograph: Guardian That was the time when puns about Acropolis Now, and ‘making a drachma out of a crisis’ were in vogue: Greek debt crisis, 28 April 2010 Photograph: Guardian But there wasn’t much time for jokes.
  • (12) Despite the vogue for conservatism, circumcision still has an important part to play in the management of troublesome foreskins in children.
  • (13) In a 1962 issue of Vogue, Siriol Hugh-Jones, the magazine's former features editor, unleashed a tirade of abuse on that triumvirate of women writers: Iris Murdoch, Muriel Spark and Lessing.
  • (14) Her latest, a New York Times bestseller that began life as a Vogue piece, is a frank exploration of ageing in a society that prizes youth.
  • (15) I was flicking through a copy of this month's Vogue and there's Kate Moss topless.
  • (16) Luxury shopping online clearly plays a part in this, and is evolving again – editorial content is in demand (Style.com's print magazine will be followed by Net-a-porter's for spring ), and sites including Moda Operandi , set up by ex-American Vogue staffers, have introduced the idea of pre-ordering pieces from the catwalk.
  • (17) It’s a great place to come from,” she said in an interview with Vogue in September.
  • (18) It's Barcelona versus Arsenal at what I now feel obliged by the current vogue to refer to as the "Camp Now".
  • (19) The Soil Association is due to release a report soon that will confirm that organic came back into vogue with consumers in 2013.
  • (20) In the latest Vogue, Susie Forbes, principal at the Condé Nast College of Fashion and Design, enthuses about her treadmill desk, a refinement of the stand-up-sit-down desks (the height can be raised or lowered) now fashionable.

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