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interloper
[in-ter-loh-per]
noun
a person who interferes or meddles in the affairs of others.
He was an atheist who felt like an interloper in this religious gathering.
an intruder; trespasser.
a person who intrudes into some region or field of trade without a proper license.
interloper
/ ˈɪԳəˌəʊə /
noun
an intruder
a person who introduces himself into professional or social circles where he does not belong
a person who interferes in matters that are not his concern
a person who trades unlawfully
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of interloper1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of interloper1
Example Sentences
And she’s aware that her enmeshment with Quintana is compounded by a relationship with Dunne that left their daughter feeling like an interloper.
But there is something in the air that even an outsider could feel at the rehearsal, which was open to donors and press interlopers.
This will be the first opportunity for senators — Democrats and Republicans — to get answers on the record about DOGE’s activities at Social Security, as well as commitments to protect the program from partisan interlopers.
In “Presence,” we’re rarely allowed to forget that we are an interloper in the lives of a family as they slowly unspool.
Christian nationalists rationalize their will to dominance on false claims that they are the "true" Americans and the rest of us — liberal Christians, non-believers, non-Christians — are interlopers.
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Related 51Թs
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