Home

invado

Invado is a Latin verb meaning to invade, to enter by force, or more generally to intrude into a space, territory, or domain. In classical Latin, it is used chiefly in military contexts but also appears figuratively for intruding upon someone’s privacy or rights. The verb is common in historical and legal texts dealing with warfare, borders, and conquest.

The principal parts of invado are invādō, invādere, invāsī, invāsum. It is a third-conjugation verb in form,

Etymologically, invādō comprises the prefix in- meaning “into” and a root related to going or advancing, underscoring

See also: invasion, invader, invasionis (invasio). In modern usage, invādō’s sense ranges from military offenses to

with
the
infinitive
invādere
and
the
present
active
indicative
first
singular
invādō.
Its
perfect
form
is
invāsī,
and
the
supine
is
invāsum.
The
passive
is
formed
with
the
auxiliary
and
appropriate
participles,
and
the
perfect
passive
participle
is
invāsum
in
agreement
with
gender
and
number.
Common
derivatives
include
invāsiō,
invāsīō
(invasion
or
invasion-like
action),
and
invātor
(invader
or
intruder).
the
sense
of
moving
into
or
entering
a
space.
The
word
has
given
rise
to
descendants
in
the
Romance
languages,
such
as
Italian
invadere
and
invadere,
Spanish
invadir,
and
French
envahir,
as
well
as
the
English
verb
invade,
all
tracing
back
to
Latin
invādere.
metaphorical
intrusions,
maintaining
a
neutral
descriptor
of
action
involving
entering
or
intruding
upon
another’s
domain.