There appears to be confusion here between inline:
An inline function is a function upon which the compiler has been requested to perform inline expansion. In other words, the programmer has requested that the compiler insert the complete body of the function in every place that the function is called, rather than generating code to call the function in the one place it is defined. (However, compilers are not obligated to respect this request.)
and inline-block:
inline-block is a CSS display option which causes an element to be positioned (mostly) like an inline element, but otherwise behave (mostly) like a block element
I don't think that this is a problem with the text per se; it is clear what each refers to. I think the problem is that the people who are misusing the tags aren't reading the text. This can't be fixed by changing the text!
However, there is already inline-functions:
By using keyword 'inline' in function definition, programmer can request that the (C/C++) compiler insert the complete body of the function in every place that the function is called, rather than generating code to call the function in the one place it is defined.
and a whole load of other inline
-related tags.
I therefore suggest that inline is burninated (see here), and replaced with the more appropriate tags.