英语释义
1. a place of security and comfort refuge
the … Loyalists found harbor in the same areas
— W. G. Hardy
2. a part of a body of water protected and deep enough to furnish anchorage
a yacht harbor especially one with port facilities
3. to give shelter or refuge to
harboring a fugitive
4. to be the home or habitat of
The ledges still harbor rattlesnakes. broadly contain sense 2
a town that harbors several textile factories
5. to hold especially persistently in the mind cherish
harbored a grudge
6. to take shelter in or as if in a harbor
ships harboring in the bay
7. live
parasites that harbor in the blood
8. a part of the ocean, a lake, etc., that is next to land and that is protected and deep enough to provide safety for ships
9. a place of safety and comfort
10. to give shelter to (someone) to hide and protect (someone)
11. to have (something, such as a thought or feeling) in your mind for a long time
12. to hold or contain (something)
13. a part of a body of water (as a sea or lake) so protected as to be a place of safety for ships port
14. a place of safety and comfort refuge
15. to give shelter to
They harbored the escaped prisoner.
16. to have or hold in the mind
For years she harbored the desire to travel.
17. to contain or be the home, habitat, or host of
those who harbor the gene for the illness
— William Booth green monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops) may have harbored the ancestor of the AIDS virus
— R. C. Gallo
18. a place of security and comfort — see also safe harbor
19. to receive secretly and conceal (a fugitive from justice)
20. to have (an animal) in one's keeping
may not harbor a dog without a permit