harbouring in English

verb
1
keep (a thought or feeling, typically a negative one) in one's mind, especially secretly.
she started to harbor doubts about the wisdom of their journey
synonyms:bearnursenurturecherishentertainfosterhold on tocling to
2
give a home or shelter to.
woodlands that once harbored a colony of red deer
3
(of a ship or its crew) moor in a harbor.
he might have harbored in San Francisco

Use "harbouring" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "harbouring" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "harbouring", or refer to the context using the word "harbouring" in the English Dictionary.

1. Police believe someone must be harbouring the killer.http://Sentencedict.com

2. He'd been harbouring / nursing a grievance against his boss.

3. He has been harbouring/nursing a grudge against me.

4. Taylor denied harbouring a grudge against his former boss.

5. I'm not harbouring some secret grudge against you.

6. He has been harbouring a grudge against me.

7. You seem to be harbouring some resentment against your boss.

8. 1 He'd been harbouring / nursing a grievance against his boss.

9. Accusations of harbouring suspects were raised against the former Hungarian leadership.

10. I think he's harbouring some sort of grudge against me.

11. I hope he's not still harbouring ideas about asking me out.

12. It is indisputable that birds in the UK are harbouring this illness.

13. Get rid of them nasty things down your throat what's harbouring the germs.

14. He's been harbouring a grudge against her ever since his promotion was refused.

15. 4 It is indisputable that birds in the UK are harbouring this illness.

16. Age at diagnosis was unknown for three individuals harbouring multi-drug resistant HIV-1

17. You know the penalty laid down by Roman law for harbouring a known criminal?

18. He might have been murdered by a former client or someone harbouring a grudge.

19. He wondered whether he were harbouring " love "'for this spontaneous young woman from Albany.

20. It appeared isolated, withdrawn, harbouring something which, if revealed, might shock and frighten its neighbours.

21. It was as if it was harbouring some great consuming sadness and had lost the urge to live.

22. A 23-year-old woman law clerk has appeared in court charged with helping him escape and harbouring him.

23. The man and wife arrested with him have been bailed but probably face further questioning about suspected harbouring of an escaped prisoner.

24. This family is also characterized by a sylleibid-like or leuconoid aquiferous system harbouring eurypylous or Aphodal choanocyte chambers (Gazave et al., 2010)

25. Resistance mutations appear spontaneously and independently, so the chances of them harbouring a bacterium that is spontaneously resistant to both INH and RMP is 1 in 108 × 1 in 1010 = 1 in 1018, and the chances of them harbouring a bacterium that is spontaneously resistant to all four drugs is 1 in 1033.

26. A bitter divorce followed, in which Grey's application – accusing Chaplin of infidelity, abuse, and of harbouring "perverted sexual desires" – was leaked to the press.

27. Focal peripheral pseudoinfiltration can represent physiological growth pattern of PA; this may render a difficult distinction from low-malignant carcinomas like adenoid-cystic or epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma, harbouring also tubular structures.

28. Peter Russell to Matthew Elliott, York, 19 September 1801 When he could not sell Peggy, he advertised in the Upper Canada Gazette: "The subscriber’s black servant Peggy not having his permission to absent herself from his service, the public are hereby cautioned from employing or harbouring her without the owner’s leave.

29. The recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or reception of persons, including the exchange or transfer of control over those persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation.