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View synonyms for harbor

harbor

especially British, har·bour

[hahr-ber]

noun

  1. 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.

  2. such a body of water having docks or port facilities.

  3. any place of shelter or refuge.

    The old inn was a harbor for tired travelers.



verb (used with object)

  1. to give shelter to; offer refuge to.

    They harbored the refugees who streamed across the borders.

    Synonyms: lodge, protect
  2. to conceal; hide.

    to harbor fugitives.

  3. to keep or hold in the mind; maintain; entertain.

    to harbor suspicion.

  4. to house or contain.

  5. to shelter (a vessel), as in a harbor.

verb (used without object)

  1. (of a vessel) to take shelter in a harbor.

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Other Word Forms

  • harborer noun
  • harborless adjective
  • harborous adjective
  • unharbored adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of harbor1

before 1150; Middle English herber ( we ), herberge, Old English herebeorg lodgings, quarters ( here army + ( ge ) beorg refuge); cognate with German Herberge
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Synonym Study

Harbor, haven, port indicate a shelter for ships. A harbor may be natural or artificially constructed or improved: a fine harbor on the eastern coast. A haven is usually a natural harbor that can be utilized by ships as a place of safety; the word is common in literary use: a haven in time of storm; a haven of refuge. A port is a harbor viewed especially in its commercial relations, though it is frequently applied in the meaning of harbor or haven also: a thriving port; any old port in a storm. See cherish.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

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.

From Salon

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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