0 past simple and past participle of invade --
1 to enter a country by force with large numbers of soldiers in order to take possession of it: --
Famous people often find their privacy is invaded by the press.
Maria looks set to invade the music scene with her style and image.
Hundreds of squatters have invaded waste land in the hope that they will be allowed to stay.
Concentrations of troops near the border look set to invade within the next few days.
In the late stages (cutaneous scars), fibroblasts proliferated at the periphery of and finally invaded the granulomas with fibrotic substitution (data not shown).
However, one of six hamsters showed aggressive behaviour as the cancer invaded into the diaphragm.
That government was overthrown a year later when a paramilitary band invaded parliament.
Assume that this population is invaded by a different strategy, which is initially played by a small number of the total population.
Moreover, the enthusiasm generated by dam building began to wane in the face of the cheap oil that invaded the world markets.
These variants might have appeared in only one region, from where they invaded natural populations of other regions.
The unhaemolysed population was poorly invaded (20% of the control values).
The linear spreading velocity v is defined as the asymptotic speed for the evolution equation linearized around the unstable invaded state.