inholder
Etymology
From inhold + -er.
inholder means an indweller, or anything indwelling; inhabitant; occupant. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
noun
- An indweller, or anything indwelling; inhabitant; occupant.“They maintain that the Forest Service has been pointedly harassing them and thousands of other "inholders" across the nation -- people who own property inside areas managed by the government -- in order to discourage them, set up "precondemnation blight" and force them off their land.”
- The active forces of nature.