Skip to main content

intrusive

/in-troo-siv/US // ɪnˈtru sɪv //UK // (ɪnˈtruːsɪv) //

侵入性的,侵扰性的,侵入性,侵扰性

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : tending or apt to intrude; coming without invitation or welcome: intrusive memories of a lost love.
    • : characterized by or involving intrusion.
    • : intruding; thrusting in.
    • : Geology. having been forced between preexisting rocks or rock layers while in a molten or plastic condition.noting or pertaining to plutonic rocks.
    • : Phonetics. excrescent.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • In most democratic countries this doesn’t tend to come with consequences much more intrusive than targeted ads.

  • The nose swab, if not painful, is certainly intrusive, as a Fortune reporter found out.

  • Overseen by law firm Venable, the cross-industry group identified over a dozen intrusive ad formats that the industry should seek to avoid.

  • Bahrain, Kuwait, and Norway all launched intrusive covid-19 tracing apps that “actively carry out live or near-live tracking of users’ locations by frequently uploading GPS coordinates to a central server,” Amnesty International reported in June.

  • Meanwhile, media giants like Google invent their own ways of managing intrusive ads.

  • In a message that would resonate profoundly if given today, he warned against the intrusive power of a faceless state.

  • This disdain stems from anger at intrusive Congressional action and feckless Congressional inaction.

  • “They used Sochi as a test case for a more intrusive system,” Galeotti said.

  • Russian communications monitoring became even more intrusive earlier this year during the Sochi winter games.

  • Which means that government—good old intrusive Nanny State government— must step in even more.

  • And at every turn intrusive social legislation must seek to prevent such injustice.

  • A course gneiss is the predominant rock, but is associated with garnetiferous mica-schists and much intrusive granite.

  • Do not think me intrusive or importunate if I now call, dear sir, on you, to remember it!'

  • Mr. Dempsey stood for a few seconds, and perhaps some secret suspicion crept over him that this visit might be thought intrusive.

  • In Chittagong, then, we must look about us for the aborigines; so intrusive have become the Hindú elements.