encroach
Word family nounencroacherencroachmentadverbencroachinglyverbencroach
en·croach /ɪnˈkrəʊtʃ $ -ˈkroʊtʃ/ verb [intransitiveI always + adverbadv/prepositionprep] 1 TAKE something FROM somebodyto gradually take more of someone’s time, possessions, rights etc than you should 逐步侵占[侵犯];蚕食encroach on/upon Bureaucratic power has encroached upon the freedom of the individual. 官僚权力已经侵犯了个人的自由。
2 COVERto gradually cover more and more land 侵占(土地)encroach into The fighting encroached further east. 战斗进一步向东推进。
—encroachment noun [countableC, uncountableU] foreign encroachment 外来入侵
encroach on/upon• It fell into the business category and was therefore Bernard's province, not to be encroached upon.• This too has partly been encroached upon.• Still, development had sprung up around the edges, like weeds encroaching on a garden.• The law stipulates that a monument can not interfere or encroach upon an existing memorial.• Gordimer doesn't allow her political activities to encroach on her writing.• It always seems presumptuous to encroach on that self-sufficiency.• He had, until then, been very unwilling to encroach on the authority of his formidable Secretary of State.• The growth of bureaucratic power since 1900, Handlin wrote, had begun ominously to encroach upon the freedom of the individual.• It was staffed by women and men who didn't like outsiders encroaching on their space. From Longman Business Dictionary
encroachen·croach /ɪnˈkrəʊtʃ-ˈkroʊtʃ/ verb Origin encroach (1300-1400) Old French encrochier “to seize”, from croche “hook”