Dictionary
invasive
adjective
That invades a foreign country using military force.
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The word "invasive" is a correct and usable word in written English.
You can use it when you want to describe something or someone that encroaches on another's territory, invades something, or spreads in an uncontrolled way. For example: "The invasive species quickly spread through the pond, upsetting the existing ecosystem."
Exact(56)
Related: Groundless anti-terror laws must go | Letters Many peers expressed concern, but when highlighting aspects of this invasive control of our universities, schools, and national institutions they seemed quite unaware that its provisions (through the Prevent policy, set up in 2011) are already having lethal effects across the country, closing down public space where freedom lives.
What's unusual about the New Jersey bar case is that the plaintiffs are not the familiar type in these cases: motorists or stop-and-frisk victims outraged by what they say are invasive searches and a willful disregard by police for privacy rights.
Hill, Oscar-nominated for supporting roles in Moneyball and The Wolf of Wall Street, has been tipped since February to play the lead role of heroic security guard Richard Jewell, who foiled the attempt at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics but later came under police suspicion and suffered an invasive trial by media that left his life in ruins.
On top of chytrid, amphibians also face deforestation, habitat destruction, air and water pollution, pesticides, invasive species, a sometimes predatory pet trade and climate change.
It is enough to say in opposition that omnipresent invasive listening creates fear.
The web is used as an invasive weapon against a cast of technologically reliant teens whose grimiest secrets are hidden online.
However, they were "united" in opposition to the "healthy welfare card", which they believed would be "demeaning, invasive, unworkable and bureaucratic, creating an entire subclass of millions of people in the Australian community", read the statement.
Similar(4)
This may entail round-the-clock facilities in areas of minority concentration, and greater reliance on non-invasive techniques that might address cultural concerns about the prevalence and practice of postmortem.
Paul Turp, present vicar of St Leonard's, says: "Exploratory measurement work, which is non-invasive and uses new technology, would not harm the present church fabric in any way.
Last week the mystery of St Leonard's drew in Maurizio Seracini, professor of structural engineering at the University of California, San Diego, and an expert in the non-invasive investigation of historical sites and artworks.
High-risk patients should receive non-invasive echocardiographic (sonogram-like) screening at five years following radiation, says Patrizio Lancellotti, chair of the group that produced the recommendation; others, at ten years.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com