intrudes in English

verb
1
put oneself deliberately into a place or situation where one is unwelcome or uninvited.
he had no right to intrude into their lives
2
(of igneous rock) be forced or thrust into (a preexisting formation).
the granite may have intruded these rock layers
verb

Use "intrudes" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "intrudes" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "intrudes", or refer to the context using the word "intrudes" in the English Dictionary.

1. He intrudes upon their hospitality.

2. This garden is vast, and nothing intrudes on its peace.

3. Chaos intrudes into the lives of the characters in Grand Canyon.

4. As if an avantgarde painting, younger white rock intrudes in a tapestry of gneiss.

5. Batholiths, laccoliths and dikes are all different types of untrusions where an igneous rock intrudes other rock A batholith is a huge mas of magma that intrudes a rock formation, covering a very large area, a dike is where magma flows through a crack in the rock and a laccolith is where magma intrudes acros rock and pushes up sedimentary

6. The xenolith is situated 300 feet from the contact with the Iate Mesozoic rocks that the Bathylith here intrudes

7. 29 Under harder acceleration it intrudes, finishing up as a deep, rough-edged sounding beat at full throttle.

8. Two are in the front and no bulkhead intrudes into the Squirrel cabin so the rear seat passengers have excellent all-round vision.

9. (b) whether only a small part of one of ONGC Videsh Limited's exploration blocks actually intrudes inside China's territorial claims and if so, the details thereof;

10. A Cowl ventilator is often combined with a dorade box, which is specially designed to direct any water that intrudes into the vent out the side of the box, while still sending the air into the cabin below.

11. In other poems, instead of a binding tension, Anthropomorphosis (the "pathetic fallacy") turns nature into transcendental kitsch and disturbs even a simple and self-sustaining clarity of image; or a first-person reference intrudes, as in the title poem, in simplistic identification with nature.