Antonyms for harbored
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : hahr-ber |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈhɑr bər |
Definition of harbored
Origin :- Old English hereborgian, cognate with Old Norse herbergja, Old High German heribergon, Middle Dutch herbergen; see harbor (n.). Figuratively, of thoughts, etc., from late 14c. Related: Harbored; harboring.
- verb hide, protect
- verb hold in imagination
- A tree close to his suddenly fluttered with the unseen life it harbored.
- Extract from : « The Bluff of the Hawk » by Anthony Gilmore
- If he harbored any disappointment in him, he does not appear to have shown it.
- Extract from : « Hymns and Hymnwriters of Denmark » by Jens Christian Aaberg
- True, she has been told that it may be so—but the thought is not harbored for an instant.
- Extract from : « Graham's Magazine Vol XXXII No. 6 June 1848 » by Various
- It was not enough for Layton to protest that he harbored no such intentions.
- Extract from : « One Of Them » by Charles James Lever
- If man was a rabbit, then perhaps he harbored the check to these creatures of flame.
- Extract from : « The Whispering Spheres » by Russell Robert Winterbotham
- If he had harbored any doubts as to his success, he banished them.
- Extract from : « Tom Slade with the Colors » by Percy K. Fitzhugh
- No thought of supremacy or greater advancement should be harbored for a moment.
- Extract from : « The Right Knock » by Helen Van-Anderson
- And I could have died of shame myself to think I had ever harbored them.
- Extract from : « The La Chance Mine Mystery » by Susan Carleton Jones
- I harbored you, thinking you were a frightened fugitive, and you weren't.
- Extract from : « The Best Short Stories of 1919 » by Various
- The rooms which he had there are shown and reverenced as places which have harbored genius.
- Extract from : « My Recollections of Lord Byron » by Teresa Guiccioli
Synonyms for harbored
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019