0 present participle of trespass
1 to go onto someone's land or enter their building without permission:
2 to do something or act in a way that is not morally acceptable
On these issues, the trespassing party is almost always more likely to discuss them only in generic terms.
Consequently, there may be instances of issue trespassing, though these should still be rare relative to advertising on 'owned' issues.
Incision was made through the 6th intercostal space, never trespassing the median axillary line.
The subject can then be closed for the next twenty years and it would indeed verge on trespassing if anybody else should touch on it.
They have to observe certain familial norms, otherwise their participation would be perceived as trespassing, and would cause relationship tension.
Ill-kept or non-existent borders make trespassing easier, but trespassers can still lose their way.
A second framing strategy that facilitates trespassing is taking a position on an issue that comports with one's party's ideology and policy priorities.
This fiction allows the court to come to a conclusion that the community feels is just without reversing centuries of trespassing laws.