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inquiline

   Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
in·qui·line  (nkw-ln, -ln, ng-)
n.
An animal that characteristically lives commensally in the nest, burrow, or dwelling place of an animal of another species.
adj.
Being or living as an inquiline.

[Latin inquilnus, lodger, tenant : in-, in; see in-2 + colere, to inhabit; see kwel-1 in Indo-European roots.]

inqui·lin·ism (-l-nzm), inqui·lini·ty (-ln-t) n.
inqui·linous (-lns) adj.

inquiline [ˈɪnkwɪˌlaɪn]
n
(Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Zoology) an animal that lives in close association with another animal without harming it See also commensal [1]
adj
(Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Zoology) of or living as an inquiline
[from Latin inquilīnus lodger, from in-2 + colere to dwell]
inquilinism  [ˈɪnkwɪlɪˌnɪzəm], inquilinity [ˌɪnkwɪˈlɪnɪtɪ] n
inquilinous  [ˌɪnkwɪˈlaɪnəs] adj

inquiline
an animal that inhabits the burrow, nest, or other habitation of another animal. — inquiline, adj.
See also: Animals


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Barnouw praises Naipaul's mobile, non-aligned, inquiline movement between civilizations, and at the same time approvingly quotes another critic: As Boyers puts it sensibly: 'there is something grotesque about demanding of a world-class writer that he hew to a party line or an ethnic perspective.
North American Myrmecophilus species are inquilines that inhabit the nests of many ant species (Henderson and Akre, 1986).
Several species of warm water hydrozoan cnidarians inhabit body folds of bivalve molluscs as inquiline symbiotes.
 
 
 
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