intrude
in- ‘into’ + trudere ‘to thrust’
https://gyazo.com/68ebbf5fcb11cf3b3f1402afbcab610c
source: So this scene happened | KonoSuba | Know Your Meme
verb
1. no object put oneself deliberately into a place or situation where one is unwelcome or uninvited:
〈人・事などが〉 【他人の私事に】立ち入る
e.g. he had no right to intrude into their lives
e.g. she felt awkward at intruding on private grief.
enter with disruptive or adverse effect:
【人などの】じゃまをする; 【他人の部屋などへ】侵入する «into, on, upon»
e.g. politics quickly intrude into the booklet.
with object introduce into a situation with disruptive or adverse effect:
e.g. to intrude political criteria into military decisions risks reducing efficiency.
2. with object Geology (of igneous rock) be forced or thrust into (a preexisting formation):
e.g. the granite may have intruded these rock layers.
(usually be intruded) force or thrust (igneous rock) into a preexisting formation.
ORIGIN
mid 16th century (in the sense ‘usurp an office or right’; originally as entrude): from Latin intrudere, from in- ‘into’ + trudere ‘to thrust’.