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"prying into" is correct and commonly used in written English
You can use "prying into" when describing someone's actions of excessively and intrusively trying to find out about others' personal lives or secrets. Example: "He couldn't stand his nosy neighbor constantly prying into his business and asking personal questions."
Exact(59)
Suspicion of homosexuality lead to investigations — with officials prying into people's personal lives.
Was the British government in the business of prying into people's private correspondence?
And concern about his welfare cannot fairly be dismissed as prying into his private affairs.
Spark insisted that Eliot was the Braybrookes' window cleaner, that he was prying into their papers.
"I was prying into my past — all my history of being provoked".
No editors or academics would agonize about prying into candidates' private lives.
The press junkets, the profiles with strangers prying into one's personal life.
Outsiders were always coming to Sooner Haven to sell opportunity, prying into the residents' business while doing so.
The Paris Review interviews are famous, or infamous, for prying into how writers physically get their words onto the page.
Dakotah had told a boy in his unit that he'd kill him if he kept prying into his case.
Most celebrities who have established themselves tend to resent the presence of photographers and gossipmongers prying into their private lives.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com