Inquiline

ahd-5
  • noun. An animal that characteristically lives commensally in the nest, burrow, or dwelling place of an animal of another species.
  • adjective. Being or living as an inquiline.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. In zoology, an animal that lives in an abode properly belonging to another, either at its expense, as certain insects that live in galls made by the true gall-insects, or merely as a cotenant, as a pea-crab which lives in an oyster-shell, or a sea-anemone growing on a crab's back; a commensal. See cut under cancrisocial.
  • Having the character of an inquiline; commensal.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • noun. A gallfly which deposits its eggs in galls formed by other insects.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • noun. An animal that lives commensally in the nest, burrow, gall, or dwelling place of an animal of another species.
  • noun. An organism that lives within a reservoir of water collected in the hollow of a plant stem or leaf.
  • Word Usage
    "A cross-grained trapper with murty odd oogs, awflorated ares, inquiline nase and a twithcherous mouph?"
    cross-reference