0 present 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.
Decreased recovery of invading parasites from the lungs as a parameter of acquired immunity to schistosomiasis in the laboratory mouse.
Therefore, changes of eel parasite diversity can be correlated with the appearance of invading crustacean species (neozoans).
Only about 3 % of the larvae successfully invading the host population survive until the first opportunity for reproduction.
To use the tort analogy, governmental agents must have good reasons for invading privacy, and they must do so as respectfully as possible.
The emphasis on non-state structures and institutions interacting with, and responding to, invading state structures and institutions is particularly informative.
Additional 3i200 simulations that specifically measured the percentage of the best class each generation that had individuals with the invading allele.
Some lawyers also wholeheartedly reject linguists invading their territory.
The final step of the complement cascade is the formation of the membrane attack complex which causes lysis of invading organisms.