0 in a vicarious way (= experienced through the activities of other people, rather than by doing something yourself):
Some parents seem to live vicariously through their children.
People like to vicariously experience that kind of danger.
The owner of a motor vehicle is vicariously responsible for injuries even though he is not driving the car.
An employer could be vicariously liable for acts of harassment committed by employees.
It’s awesome to vicariously live in the city through you guys.
I’ve been travelling vicariously through her fabulous trip to Germany and China.
Differentiation of vicariously induced emotional reactions in children.
In such polyphonic settings, however, dance, which could have stood vicariously for chorus action, was excluded.
Thus, they experience desire only vicariously, by being the willing object of male sexuality.
Evidence suggests that personalizing modeled experiences is more vicariously arousing than perspective-taking.
The project to impress monarchical authority was conducted vicariously through the figure of the viceroy, through the rituals that surrounded him in his political life.