Intermeddling
51officious — adj 1. meddlesome, meddling, intermeddling, interfering, intrusive, intruding, pragmatic; prying, inquisitive, busybody, Inf. nosy; obtrusive, forward, overbold, Inf. pushy; overkind, overzealous, overly solicitous; importunate, persistent,… …
52intermeddle — /ɪntəˈmɛdl/ (say intuh medl) verb (i) (intermeddled, intermeddling) to take part in a matter, especially officiously; interfere; meddle. –intermeddler, noun …
53interference — [n] meddling, impedance arrest, background, backseat driving*, barging in*, barring, blocking, checking, choking, clashing, clogging, conflict, hampering, hindrance, intermeddling, interposition, intervention, intrusion, meddlesomeness,… …
54meddlesome — [adj] interfering busy, busybody*, chiseling*, curious, encumbering, hindering, impeding, impertinent, intermeddling, interposing, interrupting, intruding, intrusive, kibitzing*, meddling, mischievous, nosy, obstructive, officious, prying, pushy …
55nosy — [adj] curious; prying eavesdropping, inquisitive, inquisitorial, inquisitory, interested, interfering, intermeddling, intrusive, meddlesome, personal, searching, snooping, snoopy; concept 401 Ant. indifferent, uncaring, unconcerned, uninterested …
56de son tort — /da sown tor(t)/ L. Fr. Of his own wrong. An executor de son tort is an executor of his own wrong. A person who assumes to act as executor of an estate without any lawful warrant or authority, but who, by his intermeddling, makes himself liable… …
57extraordinary grand jury — Such jury is limited in scope of its investigation and may not go beyond terms of executive proclamation, and examination of witness must be confined within those terms, and must not be used as a means of disclosing or intermeddling with… …
58maintenance — The upkeep or preservation of condition of property, including cost of ordinary repairs necessary and proper from time to time for that purpose. Bogan v. Postlewait, 265 N.E.2d 195, 197. See also maintain Sustenance; support; assistance; aid. The …
59medletum — /medliytam/ In old English law, a mixing together; a medley or melee; an affray or sudden encounter. An offense suddenly committed in an affray. The English word medley is preserved in the term chance medley. An intermeddling, without violence,… …
60de son tort — /da sown tor(t)/ L. Fr. Of his own wrong. An executor de son tort is an executor of his own wrong. A person who assumes to act as executor of an estate without any lawful warrant or authority, but who, by his intermeddling, makes himself liable… …