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The phrase "attic dweller" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to someone who lives in an attic or metaphorically to describe someone who is reclusive or withdrawn.
Example: "The attic dweller rarely ventured outside, preferring the solitude of their cramped living space."
Alternatives: "loft resident" or "attic inhabitant".
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A tenant at one building with new attic dwellers, Mariya, an elderly woman who withheld her full name because she did not want to openly criticize the government, said: "Why can't they understand the attic belongs to all the tenants?
For example, Auslander's spastic novel "Hope: A Tragedy" presents her as an ancient attic-dweller plugging away on a follow-up to the diary.
Beloved attic-dwellers Jesse and Becky Katsopolis, played by John Stamos and Lori Loughlin on the 1990s sitcom, appear to still be going strong in the Netflix revival, "Fuller House".
In 1907, Pond was also one of the founders with Hamlin Garland of the Cliff Dwellers Club (originally known as the Attic Club and later the Little Room), a private club in Chicago for professionals engaged in the fine arts and performing arts.
I posed the question to three residential energy specialists, and in the process learned some tricks — a few of which will also help apartment dwellers, who usually have no worries about foundation cracks or attic insulation.
Your attic.
Pleasance Attic.
In this attic.
Upstairs in the attic,.
Time to check the attic.
I had an attic!
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com