¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Harboured
1. harbour [v] - See also: harbour
Lexicographical Neighbors of Harboured
Literary usage of Harboured
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Preston Court Leet Records by Preston (Lancashire, England). Court Leet (1905)
"Thomas Anderton and his wife and children harboured by Mr. James Wall. John Shorte
and his wife and children harboured by Sir Richard Hoghton. ..."
2. The Autobiography of Benvenuto Cellini by Benvenuto Cellini (1910)
"... because, albeit she had harboured some angry feelings toward me, she had in
her a certain way of dealing which was generous. xcvi About that time I was ..."
3. The Harvard Classics by Charles William Eliot (1910)
"... I have above described; yet it turned out that I had done the worst for myself,
because, albeit she had harboured some angry feelings toward me, ..."
4. The Connoisseur by George Colman, B. Thornton (1903)
"In this article we will deal only with that portion of the collection which is
harboured at Cambridge House, admirably adapted for the purpose, ..."
5. The Diary of Master William Silence: A Study of Shakespeare & of Elizabethan by Dodgson Hamilton Madden (1897)
"... CHAPTER II HOW THE HABT WAS harboured I with the morning's love have oft made
sport, And like a forester, the groves may tread. ..."
6. Criminal Trials by David Jardine (1835)
"ley mow in his barn, a place to be least suspected and securest for their safety,
there were they harboured and relieved by them severally as occasion ..."