0 to go into a place or situation in which you are not wanted or not expected to be:
1 to go into a place or be involved in a situation where you are not wanted or do not belong:
Individuals with relatively large home-range areas may have greater difficulty detecting intruding animals, especially in complex forest environments with limited visibility.
We are most grateful to all the participants in the study who allowed us to intrude into their home-lives and personal relationships.
Sometimes it is merely bad luck that intrudes.
Most countries began to intrude into the doctor-patient relationship by subsidizing non-governmental insurers, rather than financing services.
While the reduplicant systematically intrudes between the segments of a consonant cluster, the same does not hold when an initial geminate is at issue.
She also points to how the self nonetheless continues to intrude in the clinical encounter.
For non-renewable resources, with relatively simple dynamics, this works well; for living resources, however, far greater nonlinearities intrude, complicating analysis immensely.
And television has so intruded into everyday life that each home has several wall-sized screens.
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闖入,侵擾…
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闯入,侵扰…
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inmiscuirse, molestar, entrometerse…
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intrometer-se…
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içeri dalmak, rahatsız etmek, münasebetsiz zamanda gitmek…
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s’imposer, déranger, se mêler de…
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rušit, obtěžovat, vetřít se…
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