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Showing results for obtrusion. Search instead for Abstrusion.
Synonyms

obtrusion

American  
[uhb-troo-zhuhn] / əbˈtru ʒən /

noun

  1. the act of obtruding.

  2. something obtruded.


Other Word Forms

  • obtrusionist noun
  • preobtrusion noun

Etymology

Origin of obtrusion

1570–80; < Late Latin obtrūsiōn- (stem of obtrūsiō ), equivalent to Latin obtrūs ( us ) ( obtrūd ( ere ) to obtrude + tus past participle suffix, with dt > s ) + -iōn- -ion

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

This, however, was a different order of obtrusion.

From The Guardian • Apr. 2, 2011

The obtrusion of these two dead women upon Poe's subliminal nature is seen in the self-frustration of incipient amours before his marriage with a "consumptive angel" of 13, Virginia Clemm.

From Time Magazine Archive

Equally important is inappropriateness: "the linking of disparates, the collision of different mental spheres, the obtrusion into one context of what belongs in another."

From Time Magazine Archive

Nothing is so odious as the obtrusion of technic in any work of art.

From Great Pianists on Piano Playing Study Talks with Foremost Virtuosos. A Series of Personal Educational Conferences with Renowned Masters of the Keyboard, Presenting the Most Modern Ideas upon the Subjects of Technic, Interpretation, Style and Expression by Cooke, James Francis

You may take ham to appease hunger, or you may take it to prevent the obtrusion of that vulgar sensation.

From For Fortune and Glory A Story of the Soudan War by Paget, Walter