0 to enter a country by force with large numbers of soldiers in order to take possession of it:
Concentrations of troops near the border look set to invade within the next few days.
Hundreds of squatters have invaded waste land in the hope that they will be allowed to stay.
Maria looks set to invade the music scene with her style and image.
Famous people often find their privacy is invaded by the press.
The Spanish Armada was sent by the king of Spain to invade England in 1588.
Supporters invaded the pitch.
The D-Day landings began on 6 June 1944, when Allied forces invaded Normandy.
They fought fearlessly against the troops who were invading from the north.
The country does not have the resources to invade its neighbour.
Patients with tumors that invaded the chest wall or skin, or with inflammatory carcinoma, were excluded.
In short, the comic poet is invading the territory of the tragic muse.
The immune response to any invading microorganism can be divided into innate and adaptive immunity.
中文繁体
入侵,侵略, (通常為了謀財或搞破壞而不受歡迎地)湧入,蜂擁而至, 強勢進入(某領域)…
More中文简体
入侵,侵略, (通常为了谋财或搞破坏而不受欢迎地)涌入,蜂拥而入, 强势进入(某领域)…
MoreEspañol
invadir…
MorePortuguês
invadir…
More日本語
侵略する…
MoreTürk dili
istila etmek, akın etmek, doluşmak…
MoreFrançais
envahir…
MoreCatalan
envair…
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