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Sentences with harbor

har·bor
H h
  • She led us to a room with a balcony overlooking the harbor.
  • He might have been murdered by a former client or someone harboring a grudge.
  • However, during later stages of IPF, cysts and bronchiectasis may develop, allowing these areas to harbor infections in the native lung.
  • Its members have been checking underwater structures and helping the Coast Guard patrol the harbor whenever a cruise liner berths.
  • Accusations of harboring suspects were raised against the former Hungarian leadership.
  • To harbor a grudge
  • She suddenly wished the ship's library didn't harbor so many annoying memories.
  • These could harbor previously unknown species of marine life.
  • The old inn was a harbor for tired travelers.
  • They harbored the refugees who streamed across the borders.
  • Obviously, if you offer a safe harbor, some agents just won't bother to learn new skills.
  • The ideology also affords a safe harbor of rationalization.
  • To harbor fugitives.
  • To harbor suspicion.
  • I learned that ships harbor a host of great places for babies to crawl and play.
  • Venomous fish should not be confused with poisonous species, such as the infamous puffer fish, which harbor colonies of toxin-producing bacteria.
  • A harbor, even if it is a little harbor, is a good thing, since adventurers come into it as well as go out, and the life in it grows strong, because it takes something from the world, and has something to give in return - Sarah Orne Jewett
  • The neighborhood is a well-known harbor for petty thieves.
  • For what group does not secretly harbor the desire to shield its truths, which it hopes are expressions of Truth itself, from a probing critique?
  • On one level the little arms around you and the fact that he regards you as a safe harbor in a pinch is a great, uplifting feeling.
  • Bats host many high-profile viruses that can infect humans, including severe acute respiratory syndrome and Ebola. A recent study explored the ecological variables that may contribute to bats’ propensity to harbor such zoonotic diseases by comparing them with another order of common reservoir hosts: rodents.
  • The fleet harbored in the south.
  • When in doubt, speakers eagerly returned to the safe harbor of Kerry's war record.
  • Children most frequently harbor belminthic infections because of their close contact with soil and poor hygienic practices.
  • She harbors a conviction that her husband has a secret, criminal past.
  • Both sites show evidence they once contained liquid water and might therefore harbor fossils of primitive life.
  • Many of us secretly harbor a suspicion that somebody somewhere really is finding both fun and fulfillment while being sexually promiscuous.
  • Time and again, the legislation has sailed through congressional votes only to encounter choppy seas as it neared the safe harbor of enactment.
  • And some primates harbor deadly diseases, like herpes B, that they can pass on to human primates via bites and scratches.
  • Certain plants if grown in the wrong area can almost be counted on to harbor disease.
  • In BRIT, use harbour
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