trespass implies an unwarranted or unlawful intrusion.
hunters trespassing on farmland
encroach suggests gradual or stealthy entrance upon another's territory or usurpation of another's rights or possessions.
the encroaching settlers displacing the native peoples
infringe implies an encroachment clearly violating a right or prerogative.
infringing a copyright
invade implies a hostile and injurious entry into the territory or sphere of another.
accused of invading their privacy
Examples of invade in a Sentence
Verb
The troops invaded at dawn.
When tourists invade, the town is a very different place.
The cancer eventually invaded the brain.
Weeds had invaded the garden.
Bacteria invaded and caused an infection.
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Verb
The court also upheld that the 14th Amendment guarantees citizenship for all except in the narrowest of cases, like the children of diplomats and invading soldiers.—
Syra Ortiz Blanes,
Miami Herald,
30 June 2026 Unlike some pests, chipmunks are generally not trying to invade your living room.—
Jessica Safavimehr,
Southern Living,
30 June 2026 Only about a third of clinical cases come from blood; the rest are found in urine, wounds and the respiratory tract, where the fungus is often colonizing rather than invading.—
John Drake,
Forbes.com,
30 June 2026 Ukraine prompts the return of sketches One year almost to the day after the COVID Diary ended, Russia invaded Ukraine.—
Jan Ellen Spiegel,
Hartford Courant,
29 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for invade
Word History
Etymology
Verb
borrowed from Latin invādere "to enter with hostile intent, assault, attack," from in-in- entry 2 + vādere "to advance, go (quickly or purposefully)" — more at wade entry 1