different between inholding vs onholding

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


onholding

English

Etymology

From on- +? holding.

Adjective

onholding (comparative more onholding, superlative most onholding)

  1. Continuous; perpetual; lasting.
    • 1859, William Barnes, Views of labour and gold:
      In the work of a waggon-builder or coach-maker, if a man made a whole wheel, the shaving of spokes would come in its turn with other kinds of work that would call the workman into sundry postures, with sundry muscles in action ; whereas, when by a more exact division of labour, one man is confined only to the shaving of spokes, he may have a daily onholding pressure on the stomach that may soon affect his health.
    • 2009, http://crystalgyro.wordpress.com/,New life in Eastern Asia?:
      Since Friday morning police officers of the city of Seoul, Republic of Korea, are experiencing an onholding increase of witnesses of a yet unidentified, possibly hazardous biological phenomenon.

Anagrams

  • holding on

onholding From the web:

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