It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 10th.
Today's word is vicarious, spelled V-I-C-A-R-I-O-U-S.
Vicarious is an adjective.
A vicarious emotion or experience is one felt by watching, hearing about,
or reading about someone else, rather than by doing something yourself.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the San Diego Union Tribune by George Varga.
That jagger can still sing and dance up a storm at 80 is a triumph for him and should provide a vicarious thrill for anyone who attends a concert by the Rolling Stones next year.
If you love to read adventure tales from the comfort of your home,
you're already a pro at living vicariously, so throw on those readers and let us paint a picture.
Your mission, should you choose to accept it,
is to study language and share what you've learned with the world.
You wake up and pour yourself a strong cup of coffee, and then the work begins.
Today, you are tasked with understanding the history of the word vicarious.
Your research confirms that this word originally described something having the function of a substitute.
That is, something that serves instead of another thing,
and that it comes from the Latin noun vicis, which means change, or stead.
What's more, you learn that vicis is also the source of the English prefix vice,
as in vice-president, meaning one that takes the place of.
keeping in mind the most common meaning of vicarious,
which is experienced through imaginative or sympathetic participation,