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vicariously
[ vahy-kair-ee-uhs-lee, vi- ]
adverb
- through the experience of another person:
Adventure novels transport us to strange lands, fraught with perilous situations and terrifying monsters we can vicariously vanquish.
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ²Ô´Ç²Ô·±¹¾±Â·³¦²¹°ù·¾±Â·´Ç³Ü²õ·±ô²â adverb
- ³Ü²Ô·±¹¾±Â·³¦²¹°ù·¾±Â·´Ç³Ü²õ·±ô²â adverb
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of vicariously1
Example Sentences
But lawyers acting for the former players argued that the boys club and Celtic were "intimately connected" and the senior club was "vicariously liable" for assaults carried out.
When spiritual teacher Ram Dass interviewed Allen Ginsberg in the 1980s, they discussed how the invention of television had conditioned people to be less empathetic, experiencing things vicariously.
Instead, he intends for viewers to experience the lives of characters vicariously.
There are millions of American men who either do the same or who now live vicariously through one who does.
"You can lose yourself and live vicariously through the characters, and yet also connect deeply with the emotions you carried into the theater and are now being shared with the music and the story."
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