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harbor
[hahr-ber]
noun
a part of a body of water along the shore deep enough for anchoring a ship and so situated with respect to coastal features, whether natural or artificial, as to provide protection from winds, waves, and currents.
such a body of water having docks or port facilities.
any place of shelter or refuge.
The old inn was a harbor for tired travelers.
verb (used with object)
to give shelter to; offer refuge to.
They harbored the refugees who streamed across the borders.
to conceal; hide.
to harbor fugitives.
to keep or hold in the mind; maintain; entertain.
to harbor suspicion.
to house or contain.
to shelter (a vessel), as in a harbor.
verb (used without object)
(of a vessel) to take shelter in a harbor.
Other Word Forms
- harborer noun
- harborless adjective
- harborous adjective
- unharbored adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of harbor1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Besides its musical offerings, Gothicumbia has developed a reputation for harboring the most inventive Latin goth fashion.
Both have talked of returning their country to a “great” past and have harbored desires of annexing or dominating other countries.
Follow them, Souvanna warns, or risk being thrown into the harbor.
Diving in a kelp forest in Monterey Bay recently, I watched a tubby 200-pound harbor seal follow a fellow diver, nibbling on his flippers.
But the effort was ultimately bogged down by internal bureaucracy and international pressure — most notably from Qatar and Turkey, both sometime U.S. partners that harbor strong Brotherhood sympathies and bankroll Islamist causes.
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