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vicariously

[ US /vaɪˈkɛɹiəsɫi/ ]
[ UK /vɪkˈe‍əɹɪəsli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. indirectly, as, by, or through a substitute
    she enjoyed the wedding vicariously

How To Use vicariously In A Sentence

  • The employers were not vicariously liable for his negligence.
  • He refers to the sympathetic reader who vicariously extrapolates the speaker's pain.
  • In all, this is a handsome book which gave me much pleasure as I toured vicariously places hallowed by centuries of Catholic piety.
  • Not yesterday, or in George Bush's and every neocon's vicariously fulfilled hafnium wet-dream of glory, but TODAY, right this moment type of today: Why? As to Afghanistan, this Thanksgiving it was ���Thanks, but No Thanks.'
  • Under this rule, if Y is employed by X, X will be vicariously liable for the actions of Y.
  • In movies we get to vicariously fight back against the things or people that do the dirty on us.
  • And, even if I can't follow his peripatetic tracks around the globe, I can enjoy his travels vicariously.
  • The only way we can experience such royal events now is vicariously, through our modern media.
  • she enjoyed the wedding vicariously
  • The jangling of Ronnie's keys as he powers through the mall's privier and more depressing halls, as we vicariously experience the dismal lows and literal, orgasmic /Film
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