Intrusiveness
Intrusiveness can refer to a behavior, act, state or disposition towards being intrusive, interrupting and disturbing to others. Intrusiveness is typically unwelcome and recipients of intrusive behavior may feel like the intruder is coming without welcome or invitation, invading their personal space, or interfering in their private life. People who are introverted may be more likely to experience the feeling of being intruded upon.[1][2]
There are many interjections, idioms and phrases which are related to intrusiveness, such as mind your own business or being nosey. Nouns for people who are associated with intrusive behavior include snooper, interferer, interrupter, intruder, interposer, invader, intervener, intervenist, interventionist, pryer, stickybeak, gatecrasher, interloper, peeping tom, persona non grata, encroacher, backseat driver, kibitzer, meddler, nosy parker, marplot, gossipmonger and yenta. There are also some more derisive terms such as buttinsky or busybody.[3] Intrusiveness can come at the hands of a political administration where it may be described as a nanny state or mass surveillance, but can also be derived from oneself or by other individuals such as family members, friends, associates or strangers.[4][5] Such an occurrence may culminate into feelings of embarrassment.[6]
References
- ^ Higher Reality Therapy: Nine Pathways to Inner Peace - Page 160, Anthony Falikowski - 2010
- ^ A Level Psychology Through Diagrams - Page 274, Grahame Hill - 2001
- ^ OneLook Dictionary Search retrieved 28 October 2013
- ^ Maximum Potential an American Possibility - Page 2, Richard Monts 2010
- ^ Richard hanley, South Park and Philosophy: Bigger, Longer, and More Penetrating p 91, 2013
- ^ Bruce Hyman, 2009, The Ocd Workbook p 27
- v
- t
- e
- Evolving capacities
- Free-range parenting
- Future generations
- Intergenerational equity
- Leaving the nest
- Student voice
- Youth-adult partnership
- Youth mainstreaming
- Youth rights
- Youth voice
- Anarchistic free school
- Community youth development
- Democratic education
- Popular education
- Positive youth development
- Student activism
- Student-centered learning
- Student rights
- Teen court
- Youth activism
- Youth council
- Youth engagement
- Youth leadership
- Youth-led media
- Youth organizations
- Youth participation
- Youth philanthropy
- Youth politics
- Youth service
- Youth suffrage
- Youth vote
- Youth work
- Adultcentrism
- Adultism
- Age restrictions
- Ageism
- Control freak
- Eleutherophobia
- Ephebiphobia
- Fear of children
- Gerontocracy
- Grounding
- Helicopter parent
- Infantilization
- Intrusiveness
- Narcissism
- Parental respect
- Paternalism
- Patriarchy
- School-to-prison pipeline
- Vicariousness
- Youth control complex
- Youth exclusion
- Age of candidacy
- Age of consent reform
- Age of criminal responsibility
- Beat Generation
- Beatnik
- The Catcher in the Rye
- Counterculture of the 1960s
- Greaser
- Hippies
- Hungry generation
- International Youth Year
- LGBT student movement
- Subcultures of the 1950s
- Taking Children Seriously
- The Teenage Liberation Handbook
- Teenage rebellion
- UK underground
- Voting age
This vocabulary-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e