fashion
51Fashion — This is a surname of post medieval French Huguenot protestant origins. Recorded in a wide variety of spellings including Fassan, Fasson, Fashin, Fashion, and Fazan, it derives from the word facan , which in medieval France originally described… …
52fashion — noun 1》 a currently popular style of clothing, behaviour, etc. ↘the production and marketing of new styles of clothing and cosmetics. 2》 a manner of doing something. verb make into a particular form or article. Phrases after a fashion to a… …
53fashion — 1. noun 1) the fashion for tight clothes Syn: vogue, trend, craze, rage, mania, fad, style, look, convention; informal thing 2) the world of fashion Syn: clothes, cloth …
54fashion — {{#}}{{LM F42562}}{{〓}} {{[}}fashion{{]}} {{■}}(ing.){{□}} {{《}}▍ adj.inv.{{》}} {{<}}1{{>}} {{※}}col.{{¤}} De última moda: • con su inconfundible toque fashion.{{○}} {{<}}2{{>}} {{\}}LOCUCIONES:{{/}} ► {{{}}fashion victim{{}}} {{《}}▍ s.f.{{》}}… …
Diccionario de uso del español actual con sinónimos y antónimos
55fashion — See: AFTER A FASHION, HIGH FASHION or HIGH STYLE …
56fashion — See: AFTER A FASHION, HIGH FASHION or HIGH STYLE …
57Fashion — Mode (habillement) Pour les articles homonymes, voir mode. La mode (ou les modes), et plus précisément la mode vestimentaire, désigne la manière de se vêtir, conformément au goût d une époque dans une région donnée. C est un phénomène impliquant… …
58fashion — 1. noun a) A current (constantly changing) trend, favored for frivolous rather than practical, logical, or intellectual reasons. When it had advanced from the wood, it hopped much after the fashion of a kangaroo, using its hind feet and tail to… …
59fashion — (fa chion) s. f. Néologisme. • Mot anglais qui s emploie pour désigner la mode, le ton et les manières du grand monde et le beau monde lui même Les fantassins de la fashion y affluent [aux Tuileries] des quatre points cardinaux, CH. DE BERNARD… …
60fashion — [13] The underlying notion of fashion is of ‘making’, ‘forming’, or ‘shaping’. The main modern sense of the word developed via ‘particular shape or style’, ‘way, manner’, and ‘prevailing or current manner’. English acquired it via Anglo Norman… …