Pervade: think of PERverse, and inVADE--something unwelcome which infiltrates an atmosphere, a mind, an ambiance.
Some examples of usage:
Unwelcome thoughts of defeat began to pervade the mood in locker room.
One committee member's selfish agenda was allowed to pervade the proceedings.
The boy enjoyed his hamburger until he bit into a pickle, which pervaded his sense of taste.
It doesn't have to be bad really, to become spead throughout all parts of. Spring pervaded the air.
Says dictionary.com ;)
A sense of hopelessness pervaded the soldiers caught in the thick of the battle.
A sense of gloom began to pervade the building as the students were told of her death.
An open window allows the garden's scent to pervade the adjacent rooms.
Some pollutants pervade the atmosphere of New York City.
Life is a very pervade thing. You never know what is coming up next because it is all over the place.
His appetite sharpened as the aroma of spaghetti, his favorite meal, began to pervade the house.
The word "pervade" refers to something that is everywhere, such as an odor. An example of this word used in a sentence might be, "The smell of Annie's Chocolate Chip Cookies pervaded the entire apartment."
The smell of glue pervaded the factory. Throughout the book there is a pervading sense of danger.
the opposite of pervade is apples and bananas.
The word pervade is a verb. Other words for pervade are infuse, charge, transfuse, and imbue. Additional words for pervade are permeate, suffuse, impregnate, and fill.
what sentence would you write for triplet
What mood might pervade a mystery story?
primordial