0 someone who becomes involved in an activity or a social group without being asked, or enters a place without permission:
1 someone who becomes involved in an activity or a social group without being asked or wanted, or who enters a place without being allowed:
He then designates some as deserving and others as imposters and interlopers.
Not only did these interlopers represent interests often opposed to those of the settlers, but they contradicted the social relations of power on the ground.
The incongruent question follows the disruption in which an interloper stuffed toy pushes the card to rest under the second picture.
The door of public services accessible to all was not slammed shut on interlopers and thieves.
His dependent status makes him an interloper but not yet a threat.
Information disseminated by interlopers, working on local suspicions, bred misconceptions-a catalyst that accelerated and intensified the collision of civilizations.
The patent system protects the discoveries of a company so that an interloper might not jump in unfairly to take advantage.
The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon: do experimentally presented interlopers have any effect?