This is a new generation of children, vicariously living their fantasies through their fave Z-List celebs. |
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The only way we can experience such royal events now is vicariously, through our modern media. |
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Once home educators were dismissed as either hippies or pushy middle class parents living vicariously through their offspring. |
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He refers to the sympathetic reader who vicariously extrapolates the speaker's pain. |
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So, living her dream vicariously through her son, she traipsed him round church halls to entertain audiences of stout women. |
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I'm afraid you will have to enjoy this one vicariously, however, as only the chosen few can partake. |
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She hears voices, sees visions, and receives the stigmata as she vicariously relives the Passion of Jesus Christ. |
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When I advanced my long-held theory that some of his constituents were living vicariously through his exploits, Wilson readily agreed. |
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Effete easterners were eager to pay in order to experience vicariously the hardships and dangers of the fearless frontiersmen. |
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A living Mormon stands in as proxy for a deceased person, as water baptism by immersion is vicariously performed. |
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And, even if I can't follow his peripatetic tracks around the globe, I can enjoy his travels vicariously. |
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They all protect the young king, who lives vicariously through the musketeers ' exploits. |
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The judge then considered the possibility of the defendants being vicariously liable for negligence of their social workers. |
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A corporation is vicariously liable for strict liability offences to exactly the same extent as a natural person. |
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I have got a life and I don't need to live vicariously through others in a sort of blog-related addiction. |
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Clearly this is television aimed at rich people, so they can have a vicariously tingly peek into the seedy underworld of carjacking. |
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Other figures, including LBJ and Martin Luther King are observed vicariously through wire taps or electronic bugs. |
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Tchaikovsky's tragic sense of guilt led him to project himself vicariously into his female characters to convey the emotions he felt for men. |
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In the postmodern text, experiencing the sublime by vicariously transcending the self is an object of satire. |
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In movies we get to vicariously fight back against the things or people that do the dirty on us. |
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A bountiful crop of new nautical books sprouted up this year that should feed any boater's desire to remain connected, however vicariously, to the sea during the winter. |
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The hero will undergo various struggles in which you, the viewer, will be able to vicariously enjoy his stoicism while, of course, undergoing no pain. |
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Due in part to his dearth of footballing talent, he lived vicariously through the campaigns and conquests of his schoolmates and friends of greater sporting capacity. |
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But not even the threat of death can suppress the urge to live vicariously through Jack Dawson and James Bond. |
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If one is fortunate enough to be associated with a university, even as one ages, teaching allows one to contribute to, and vicariously share, in the creativity of youth. |
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By representing us, the athlete makes all of us vicariously completed men. |
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A standard line on horrow as a genre in literature and film holds that it allows consumers to confront, temporarily and vicariously, their most basic fears and/or unconscious desires. |
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Similarly, non-profit organizations may be held vicariously liable for the actions of their volunteers. |
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The concept of an employer's vicariously liability is well-established in Canadian employment law. |
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It has been held that an insurer may be vicariously liable for a policyholder's tortious acts or omissions. |
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The owner was held vicariously liable for the negligence of the driver. |
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Cooley Godward was also sued on the basis that it was vicariously liable for its employee's actions. |
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Perhaps, too, it is time for us to all be honest with ourselves – we enjoy living vicariously through these thrill seekers. |
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The employers were not vicariously liable for his negligence. |
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Normally, a company is vicariously liable for the acts or omissions of their employees. |
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Through the assumption of roles, students will vicariously experience actual Canadian events. |
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It should also be noted that employers will likely be held vicariously liable for the intentional wrongs committed by their employees. |
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In the happy ending, the victim wins and you can vicariously enjoy her retaliation against the other woman. |
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Bell was also held vicariously liable for Ayotte's torts, and directly liable for negligence and constructive dismissal. |
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Living vicariously through his teammates was better than being home, preoccupied each day with his eroding strength. |
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The essence of these two decisions is that if an organization makes program staffing decisions that enhance the risk of harm, the organization may be vicariously liable should harm occur. |
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I live vicariously through others and remember back to the good old days. |
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It is not good enough to say that we will adopt best practices from other countries or that we are going to look around the world and vicariously get some form of child protection in Canada. |
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However, we should not now make the mistake of trying to achieve a transitional solution which pushes the Supervisory Committee vicariously into this role, as this would not be the appropriate role. |
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The main issue at the trial would have centered on whether the associate was on a work-related call, and therefore whether the employer was vicariously liable. |
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Recor was held vicariously liable for Schoen's and Piper's activities: it had knowledge of those activities and, more important, had derived benefits from them. |
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The simplest way of describing how watching television violence leads to aggression is that children observe novel aggressive behaviours and learn vicariously that aggressive acts are rewarded. |
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Fear, greed, power-hunger, rage: these are aspects of our selves that we try not to experience in our lives but often want, even need, to experience vicariously through stories of others. |
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Similarly, they vicariously know the context and experience of people living at the grassroots level, yet they are not encumbered by the survival demands facing many at this level. |
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Further, medical staff also indicated a great need for psychological support and assistance for the health care providers themselves who vicariously experience the horrors lived through by their patients. |
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Kale draws Ashley and his goofy best friend Ronnie into his investigation, vicariously experiencing their footwork via cell phones and minicams. |
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Watching her on TV, people will have lived through her vicariously. |
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The judgment re-establishes that the directors and the shareholders cannot be made vicariously liable in criminal matters. |
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Ever a bit amateurish, and never quite an echt Impressionist, he inspires vicariously, conveying the ardency of a cultivated fellow-traveller in an epoch of aesthetic revolution. |
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But that was because I felt I was vicariously witnessing not one of those rare moments when the British achieve a sense of national identity but the well-staged funeral of a combative ideologue. |
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Syperda was vicariously liable for the negligence of CRNAs Catsos and Siegel, and that AA was vicariously liable for the negligence of its employees, Drs. |
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