fashion ●●●●●
Oxford 5000 vocabulary |A2|Oxford 1001 vocabularySPEAKING vocabularyWRITING vocabulary -fashion /fæʃən/ suffix [in adverbs]
fash‧ion /ˈfæʃən/ noun
fashion verb [transitive]
مد روز
رسم، روش، سبک، طرز، اسلوب، مد، ساختن، درست کردن، به شکل در آوردن، علوم مهندسی: طریقه، روانشناسی: مد، بازرگانی: شکل
▼ ادامه توضیحات دیکشنری؛ پس از بنر تبلیغاتی ▼
Advanced Persian Dictionary کامپیوتر: مدل، مد
[TahlilGaran] Persian Dictionary ▲
Synonyms & Related Words fashion[noun]Synonyms:- style, craze, custom, fad, look, mode, rage, trend, vogue
- method, manner, mode, style, way
[verb]Synonyms:- make, construct, create, forge, form, manufacture, mould, shape
Related Idioms: the in thing, the last word, the latest thing
Related Words: custom,
habit,
practice,
usage,
wont,
drift,
tendency,
convention,
form,
contrive,
devise,
design,
plan,
plot,
turn out
English Thesaurus: fashion, vogue, trend, craze/fad, something is all the rage, ... [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English Dictionary -fashion /fæʃ
ən/
suffix [in adverbs] like something, or in the way that a particular group of people does something:
They ate Indian-fashion, using their fingers. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
I. fash‧ion1 S3 W2 /ˈfæʃ
ən/
noun [
Word Family: verb:
fashion;
noun:
fashion;
adverb:
fashionably ≠
UNFASHIONABLY;
adjective:
fashionable ≠
unfashionable]
[
Date: 1300-1400;
Language: Old French;
Origin: façon, from Latin factio 'act of making', from facere 'to do, make']
1. [uncountable and countable] something that is popular or thought to be good at a particular time
fashion for the fashion for ‘discovery methods’ of learningfashion in The emerging science of photography was already changing fashions in art. Eastern religions used to be the fashion in the 60s. His ideas are coming back into fashion (=they are becoming popular again). Their music will never go out of fashion (=stop being fashionable). Self-help books are all the fashion (=they are very fashionable).2. [uncountable and countable] a style of clothes, hair etc that is popular at a particular time:
Young people are very concerned with fashion. Hats like that just aren’t the fashion.3. [uncountable] the business or study of making and selling clothes, shoes etc in new and changing styles:
magazines about fashion and beauty the London College of Fashion4. in a ... fashion in a particular way:
Please leave the building in an orderly fashion. Perhaps they could sit down and discuss things in a civilised fashion. She will be working out her problems in her own fashion (=in the way that she usually does this).5. after a fashion not very much, not very well, or not very effectively:
‘Can you speak Russian?’ ‘After a fashion.’6. after the fashion of somebody in a style that is typical of a particular person:
Her early work is very much after the fashion of Picasso and Braque.7. like it’s going out of fashion informal use this to emphasize that someone does something a lot or uses a lot of something:
Danny’s been spending money like it’s going out of fashion. ⇒
parrot fashion at
parrot1(2)
[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
II. fashion2 verb [transitive] [
Word Family: verb:
fashion;
noun:
fashion;
adverb:
fashionably ≠
UNFASHIONABLY;
adjective:
fashionable ≠
unfashionable]
1. to shape or make something, using your hands or only a few tools
fashion something from something He fashioned a box from a few old pieces of wood.fashion something into something Jamie could take a piece of wood and fashion it into a wonderful work of art.2. [usually passive] to influence and form someone’s ideas and opinions:
We are all unique human beings, fashioned by life experiences. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Collocations fashion nounI. style of dressing, etc. popular at a particular time ADJ. current, latest, modern, new | growing | changing, passing changing fashions in education This theory, though recent, is more than a passing fashion.
high The store sells everything from sports clothes to high fashion.
designer the influence of Italian designer fashion on the clothes industry
female, street, youth | architectural, cultural, intellectual VERB + FASHION be, be in She wore a powdered wig, as was the fashion of the day. Black is always in fashion.
become, come into Pessimism has become the fashion. When did flares first come into fashion?
fall out of, go out of Careful spending has gone out of fashion in our consumer society.
be out of | come back into | be back in | introduce, set, start He set a fashion for large hats.
follow, keep (up) with, keep pace with I've given up trying to keep up with the latest fashions. FASHION + VERB change watching how fashions change over the years FASHION + NOUN statement Flared trousers were a fashion statement of the seventies.
model She started her career as a fashion model.
show | shoot photographers at fashion shoots
magazine | scene fresh interest in the New York fashion scene
capital Paris, the world's fashion capital
business, industry, market, trade, world Her summer collection took the fashion world by storm.
company, house, label one of the most successful fashion houses in Milan
retailer, shop | design, photography | designer, editor, photographer | accessory, clothes, garment | victim this season's must-have accessories that no fashion victim will be seen without PREP. after the ~ of She spoke in French after (= copying)
the fashion of the court.
~ for the fashion for long dresses
~ in Fashions in art come and go. PHRASES changes in fashion, the fashion of the day, the height of fashion The palazzo represents the height of architectural fashion for the mid-17th century.
the world of fashion household names in the world of fashion and design [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲
fashion II. way you do sth ADJ. true … The inspector insisted the meeting be held, in true spy novel fashion, in the open air.
normal, orthodox, usual Application for the course can be made in the normal fashion.
conventional, time-honoured, traditional They celebrated their win, in time-honoured fashion, by spraying champagne everywhere.
typical We had just gone out when, in typical fashion, the rain came down.
limited He has a small vocabulary and is only able to express himself in a limited fashion.
positive | no uncertain Karpov struck back in no uncertain fashion to win the seventh game.
meaningful | parrot Students become frustrated with learning verbs parrot fashion.
best (often ironic),
exemplary batons ready in best police fashion
civilized | appropriate | cavalier | controlled, orderly, organized, regular, systematic | ad hoc, desultory, haphazard, piecemeal, random, roundabout | arbitrary | straightforward | logical, predictable | linear Costs and revenues are assumed to behave in a linear fashion.
easy, leisurely, relaxed The descent of the footpath starts in easy fashion.
dramatic, spectacular | bizarre, peculiar | mysterious | friendly | jocular | business-like | democratic VERB + FASHION behave in PREP. after a ~ So they became friends, after a fashion (= to some extent)
.
in a ~ Why are they behaving in such a ridiculous fashion?
in … ~ The troops embarked in orderly fashion. [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲
Thesaurus fashion noun [uncountable and countable] a style of clothes, hair, behaviour etc that is fashionable.
Fashion is also used as an uncountable noun, when talking about all of these styles in general:
the latest fashions from Donna Karan changing fashions in popular music I'm not interested in fashion.vogue noun [singular,uncountable] if there is a
vogue for something, or it is
in vogue, it is fashionable.
Vogue sounds more formal and typical of the language that more educated speakers use than
fashion:
the current vogue for realistic animated films There was a vogue for cream furniture in the 1920s. His pictures are very much in vogue these days.trend noun [countable] a way of doing something or a way of thinking that is becoming fashionable or popular:
The magazine focuses on the latest trends in contemporary design. The trend is for people to wait longer to marry and have children.craze/fad noun [countable] informal a fashion, activity, type of music etc that suddenly becomes very popular, but only remains popular for a short time – often used about things that you think are rather silly:
a new fitness craze the current fad for bare white walls and uncomfortable-looking metal furniture I'm sure it's just a passing fad (=something that will soon stop being fashionable). fad dietssomething is all the rage formal used when saying that something is very popular and fashionable for a short time:
The game was all the rage at her school. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
Idioms