出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/11/11 16:44 UTC 版)
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”), 古期英語 wegan (“to move, carry, weigh”), Old Norse vaga (“to sway, fluctuate”), 古期英語 wagian (“to sway, totter”), German Woge (“wave”), Swedish våg (“wave”). More at wag.
vogue (countable and uncountable, plural vogues)
vogue (third-person singular simple present vogues, present participle voguing, simple past and past participle vogued)
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