harbour
柯林斯詞典
1. N-COUNT/N-IN-NAMES A harbour is an area of the sea at the coast which is partly enclosed by land or strong walls, so that boats can be left there safely. 港口
She led us to a room with a balcony overlooking the harbour. 她領(lǐng)我們到一個(gè)房間,房間帶一個(gè)俯瞰港口的陽(yáng)臺(tái)。
2. V-T If you harbour an emotion, thought, or secret, you have it in your mind over a long period of time. 長(zhǎng)期懷有
He might have been murdered by a former client or someone harbouring a grudge. 他可能是被一個(gè)前委托人或某個(gè)懷有積怨的人謀殺了。
3. V-T If a person or country harbours someone who is wanted by the police, they let them stay in their house or country and offer them protection. 窩藏
Accusations of harbouring suspects were raised against the former Hungarian leadership. 匈牙利前領(lǐng)導(dǎo)人被指控窩藏疑犯。
返回 harbour
harbour /?hɑ?b?/ (harbouring,harboured,harbours)
AM harbor
劍橋詞典
- an area of water next to the coast , often protected from the sea by a thick wall , where ships and boats can shelter
- He has a house down by the harbour.
- The Central harbour area will be closed to all marine traffic from 3.45 p.m. to 4.30 p.m.
- The harbour walls need urgent reinforcement .
- It was a pretty town with a picturesque harbour and well-preserved buildings .
- In the harbour, the boats bobbed gently up and down on the water . 返回 harbour
港口,港灣
Our hotel room overlooked a pretty little fishing harbour. 我們從賓館的房間可以俯瞰一個(gè)美麗的小漁港。
比較
dock noun (FOR SHIPS)
例句