harbour|harboured|harbouring|harbours in English
verb
[har·bour || 'hɑrbə(r) /'hɑːb-]
give shelter to, protect; take shelter; hide, conceal; hold a thought or feeling in the mind
Use "harbour|harboured|harbouring|harbours" in a sentence
1. — A harbour authority within the meaning of section 57 of the Harbours Act 1964
2. He still harboured feelings of resentment.
3. Small Craft Harbours: Implementation of the Small Craft Harbours Accelerated Infrastructure Program has progressed more quickly than anticipated.
4. She has harboured a grudge against me for years.
5. Harbours can be man-made or natural.
6. Police believe someone must be harbouring the killer.http://Sentencedict.com
7. He'd been harbouring / nursing a grievance against his boss.
8. He has been harbouring/nursing a grudge against me.
9. Taylor denied harbouring a grudge against his former boss.
10. I'm not harbouring some secret grudge against you.
11. He has been harbouring a grudge against me.
12. 7 These woodlands once harboured a colony of red deer.
13. I abandoned the garden, which harboured the non-existent toad.
14. You seem to be harbouring some resentment against your boss.
15. He still harbours ambitions of playing professional soccer.
16. Gatumba centre harboured small stocks belonging to the local rebel chiefs.
17. 1 He'd been harbouring / nursing a grievance against his boss.
18. The City of Corinth —“Master of Two Harbours”
19. Accusations of harbouring suspects were raised against the former Hungarian leadership.
20. I think he's harbouring some sort of grudge against me.
21. To the harbour.
22. I hope he's not still harbouring ideas about asking me out.
23. It is indisputable that birds in the UK are harbouring this illness.
24. The Iberian Peninsula harbours 24 taxa of native large Branchiopods (LBs)
25. Get rid of them nasty things down your throat what's harbouring the germs.