in-hab'-it, in-hab'-it-ant (yashabh, "to sit," "remain, "dwell," "inhabit" shakhen, "to settle down" "tabernacle," "dwell"; katoikeo, "to settle," "dwell"): SeeDWELL. The verb "to inhabit," now used only transitively, had once an intransitive meaning as well. Compare Cowper, Olney Hymns, XIV,
"Who built it, who inhabits there?"
So in1Ch 5:9the King James Version, "And eastward he inhabited unto the entering in of the wilderness" (but the Revised Version (British and American) "dwelt"). We have the obsolete inhabiters for "inhabitants" inRe 8:13the King James Version (but the Revised Version (British and American) "them that dwell") andRe 12:12the King James Version (but omitted in the Revised Version (British and American)). The rare inhabitress (feminine) is found only inJer 10:17margin; "the church called the inhabitress of the gardens" (Bishop Richardson).
D. Miall Edwards