intrude
verb /ɪnˈtruːd/
/ɪnˈtruːd/
(formal)动词形式
present simple I / you / we / they intrude | /ɪnˈtruːd/ /ɪnˈtruːd/ |
he / she / it intrudes | /ɪnˈtruːdz/ /ɪnˈtruːdz/ |
past simple intruded | /ɪnˈtruːdɪd/ /ɪnˈtruːdɪd/ |
past participle intruded | /ɪnˈtruːdɪd/ /ɪnˈtruːdɪd/ |
-ing form intruding | /ɪnˈtruːdɪŋ/ /ɪnˈtruːdɪŋ/ |
- [intransitive] to go or be somewhere where you are not wanted or are not supposed to be
闯入;侵入;打扰 - I'm sorry to intrude, but I need to talk to someone.
对不起打扰了,不过我有话要找人谈。 - intrude into/on/upon somebody/something legislation to stop newspapers from intruding on people’s private lives
禁止报章侵犯他人私生活的立法 - We should not intrude upon their private grief.
我们不该过问他们不愿公开的伤心事。
- I'm sorry to intrude, but I need to talk to someone.
- [intransitive] intrude (on/into/upon something) to enter into something in a way that is not wanted or to have an unpleasant effect on it
扰乱;侵扰 - The sound of the telephone intruded into his dreams.
电话铃声把他从梦中扰醒了。
- His father's image had begun to intrude on his consciousness at odd moments.
他父亲的形象开始在奇怪的时刻闯入他的意识。 - Personal, subjective elements should not be allowed to intrude.
不应允许个人的主观因素侵入。
- The sound of the telephone intruded into his dreams.
词源mid 16th cent. (in the sense ‘usurp an office or right’; originally as entrude): from Latin intrudere, from in- ‘into’ + trudere ‘to thrust’.