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Invasion   /ɪnvˈeɪʒən/   Listen
Invasion

noun
1.
The act of invading; the act of an army that invades for conquest or plunder.
2.
Any entry into an area not previously occupied.  Synonyms: encroachment, intrusion.  "An invasion of locusts"
3.
(pathology) the spread of pathogenic microorganisms or malignant cells to new sites in the body.



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"Invasion" Quotes from Famous Books



... are those wan battle-grounds where the woods made their last brave stand against the irresistible invasion,—usually at some long point of sea-marsh, widely fringed with billowing sand. Just where the waves curl beyond such a point you may discern a multitude of blackened, snaggy shapes protruding above the water,—some high enough to resemble ruined chimneys, others bearing a startling likeness ...
— Chita: A Memory of Last Island • Lafcadio Hearn

... had seen enough; but this only tended to make them slow to believe that war was really at hand. If so many quarrels had taken place, and had been settled without resort to arms, assuredly the new quarrel might be settled, and Europe get on peaceably for a few years more without warfare. Neither the invasion of Spain in 1823, nor the revolution of 1830, nor the Eastern question of 1840, nor the universal outbreaks of 1848-9, nor the threats of Russia against Turkey when she sought to compel the Sultan to give ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. IV, No. 22, Aug., 1859 • Various

... Marie Louise, whatever it was, as an invasion of some imagined property right of his own, or at least of some option he had secured somehow. He was alarmed at the Teutonic accent of the interloper. He began to take heed of how little he knew of Marie Louise, after all. He recalled Sir Joseph ...
— The Cup of Fury - A Novel of Cities and Shipyards • Rupert Hughes

... her to apprehend any resistance. Those three men, from the very moment of their arrival in Madrid, found themselves face to face with two grave difficulties. The first was the opposition of the grandees; the second, a foreign invasion. Aristocratic conspiracies were hatching in the capital. The Archduke Charles had landed in Catalonia, and several noblemen were endeavouring to clear the road for him as far as Madrid. The Marquis de Leganez was the soul of this plot. Ever ...
— Political Women, Vol. 2 (of 2) • Sutherland Menzies

... and democratic civilization against Central European autocracy on the continent of Europe. It is right that the other great Western democracies should enter into an undertaking which will ensure that they stand by her side in time to protect her against invasion should Germany ever threaten her again, or until the League of Nations has proved its capacity to preserve the peace and ...
— Peaceless Europe • Francesco Saverio Nitti


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