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: --
In a long-lived magmatic plumbing system, batches of hot, more primitive, magma may intrude into cooler, more evolved magma at shallow crustal levels.
As the state intruded into white agriculture, paternalism could also be challenged, eroded and remade.
These deeply personal feelings and experiences are related with such candour that readers might feel they are intruding on something intensely private.
Without clear boundaries, conflict from the marital relationship may intrude upon the parent- child relationship and alter the nature of that relationship.
Villagers stand united in their anger against outsiders intruding on their domain, but they are not always able to exclude them.
Material culture is not a product of a past social world, it is a part of that world which intrudes into the present.
In studies of the conditioning of agonistic behavior, the unconditioned stimulus has been an encounter with an intruding male.
And television has so intruded into everyday life that each home has several wall-sized screens.