Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
But what I'm going to do is meddling even more.
And then she would be his, meddling old men or no.
But you have no right to come in here meddling with my things.
No matter what I do, he does his best to meddle.
But I am not going to meddle in your business.
But then what right had she to meddle like that?
He used to meddle with the stuff all the time.
Always there would be men trying to own, to control, to meddle.
In other words, are researchers meddling with something too big for them at present?
Why is it all right to meddle with one culture and not another?
So we must not meddle with the quality of the rules.
"That is not a word I care to meddle with."
But even so, there were other reasons not to meddle.
What was there about this area that Al could meddle with?
Women should not meddle with writing; I told him so, but he would have his way.
This is not a place from which to start meddling in other people's relationships.
They would both benefit, and the king could go find someone else's life to meddle with.
What right have you got to meddle with other people's affairs?
He'd never quite meddled at this level before, that was all.
"You have no right to meddle with the property of others!"
The Doctor states that this shows he was not meddling, but had been asked to help.
Just an excuse to meddle in other people's business, is what I figure.
Those on the left worry about religion meddling with government.
"You're meddling in things that are none of your business!"
Man was never intended to understand things he meddled with.
She felt that she could not intermeddle with this bitterness.
But neither reader nor author may intermeddle.
Common men and women, however ignorant, may intermeddle with the knowledge of it; yet in its utmost reaches, there is that which even the sage does not know.
As they thrust themselves into all companies, and wished to intermeddle in everything, Theresa called them the gossips, and by this name they were long known at Montmorency.
Related to constructive trusts are constructive trustees, or trustees de son tort; these are where "one, not being a trustee and not having authority from a trustee, takes upon himself to intermeddle with trust matters or to do acts characteristic of the office of trustee".
Edmund's advocate opened his plea with the words, "my liege lord hols Corrnwall above the Lord King in Chief....so the Escheator of the Lord the King shall not intermeddle in anything belonging to the Sheriff of Cornwall".