Invasion in a sentence as a noun

Well, no, I mean, it wouldn't be an invasion.

But it bears repeating that the Japanese were quite willing to fight an invasion of the Home Islands.

" Because we have a constitution that assumes we're good people, and that protects our civil liberties from invasion.

Then witnessed their atrocious coverage of WMDs and the drumbeat to the Iraq invasion.

Rest assured that your attitude is far more insufferable and real than the "culture invasion" you're concerned about.

It's not simply a matter of manpower either, there was a lot that was needed to be able to provide a workable invasion:* Control of the air.

I've said this before, but I've always been truly and deeply disappointed that groups like this didn't plant realistic-looking stories about an alien invasion.

The same ones that won't let you bring your bottle of Coke on an airplane?Governments love to use "larger than life" enemies to justify a disproportionate invasion of liberty.

The Soviet invasion invalidated the military's decisive battle strategy, just as it invalidated the diplomatic strategy.

This article's evidence isn't as significant as other established facts like Zuckerberg's invasion of other people's email accounts, but it is consistent with everything else we know: in one of the modern world's great ironies, a person with no respect for his fellow human beings is the de facto gatekeeper of "friendship" on the net.

One of the emperor's advisers even mentioned the 'twin shocks' of Soviet invasion and the atom bombs as being gifts in a sense, as it meant the Emperor could say he was forced to surrender and not that Japan "gave up".So it seems clear that the Soviet invasion was core to the decision-making, but not that it was the only concern, and certainly not that the atom bomb was not factored in at all.

Add some object recognition to the 3D scanning, and you can start getting marketing messages about how much better [Featured Brand]'s refrigerator would suit your needs, courts will rule that no reasonable person would expect the interior contents of their house to be private and require a search warrant, and the DEA will be able to find something that looks enough like drug paraphenalia in the images from anyone's home to justify a home invasion of whoever their preferred target of the moment is.

Invasion definitions

noun

the act of invading; the act of an army that invades for conquest or plunder

noun

any entry into an area not previously occupied; "an invasion of tourists"; "an invasion of locusts"

See also: encroachment intrusion

noun

(pathology) the spread of pathogenic microorganisms or malignant cells to new sites in the body; "the tumor's invasion of surrounding structures"