different between inholding vs inhold

inholding

English

Etymology

From in- +? holding

Noun

inholding (plural inholdings)

  1. A piece of privately-owned land inside the boundary of a national park, national forest, state park, or similar publicly-owned protected area.

Usage notes

Note that the inholder can be another government agency. Per 43 CFR Subtitle A (10-1-09 Edition) p. 527: Inholding means State-owned or privately owned land, including subsurface rights of such owners underlying public lands or a valid mining claim or other valid occupancy that is within or is effectively surrounded by one or more areas.

Related terms

  • inholder

Verb

inholding

  1. present participle of inhold

inholding From the web:

  • what is an inholding in a national forest


inhold

English

Etymology

From in- +? hold. Compare Old English onhealdan (to hold, keep, maintain). More at in, hold.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -??ld

Verb

inhold (third-person singular simple present inholds, present participle inholding, simple past inheld, past participle inheld or (obsolete) inholden)

  1. To contain, hold in.
    • 2002, Brian Massumi, A shock to thought: expression after Deleuze and Guattari:
      Sound implicates these obscure tethers, which connect sound to noise, thereby giving sound its sense. The implicated difference inholds an obscure reserve of sense.
  2. To possess inherently, contain in oneself.
    • c. 1604-1618, Sir Walter Raleigh, Cynthia
      If to the living were my muse addressed, Or did my mind her own spirit still inhold

Synonyms

  • possess

Related terms

  • inholding
  • inholder

Anagrams

  • hold in, holdin'

Old English

Etymology

From in- (very, thoroughly) +? hold.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?in?xold/, [?in?ho?d]

Adjective

inhold

  1. utterly loyal; loyal from the heart

Declension

inhold From the web:

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