插手英语怎么说
Mrs. Blount warned me not to interfere.
In the 1970s Kodak, anxious to get in on the act, launched its own instant camera.
Early reports suggest the hand of rebel forces in the bombings.
And for those who resent the intrusion of supranational courts, but do not want to break up the institutions, there is hope.
Butt out, Neil! This is none of your business.
The phrase is also used against people who are viewed as officious or intermeddling in someone else's affairs.
Sunderland came close to signing Johnson a year ago, before City swooped in and made a more lucrative offer to Middlesbrough.
I'm sure she doesn't want us horning in on her business.
If we go after the Turk and the Families interfere, we'll negotiate the issue.
When your elder brother gets into a fight-nay, as in 1940, is fighting for his life-you forget squabbles and wade in, fast.
Japanese companies were vaguely aware of such screenings but didn't try to stop them.
Proponents of talking to Syria argue that doing so would encourage it to reduce its involvement in Lebanon, loosen its ties with Iran and stop letting insurgents cross its border into Iraq.
And thereafter he got his hands on funding for everything from highways to military bases.
Everything she touches turns to disaster.
People may roll their eyes and talk about overprotective, interfering grandmothers.
She would have liked to tell him to butt out.
We oppose interference by any outside force.
ASEAN, China points out, has no role in disputes over sovereignty.