Harbor in a sentence as a noun

>Frantz washes dishes at the Capital Grille restaurant, a posh steak house near the harbor in Miami's financial district.

" It was embraced by both content owners and internet companies, who sought the safe harbor provisions of the act.

It included some smart things, like "safe harbor" provisions for companies that simply provide a place where users can share content.

For the permission to use the ~20m of harbor space ranging from the ship to the nearby road he had to negotiate with four different parties.

Harbor in a sentence as a verb

If the fact that you've been treated contemptuously causes you to begin harboring suspicions, it's because you are irrational and stupid.

[1] Disclaimer: I've lived in at least seven different cities in three continents, and harbor no particular emotional attachment to any of them.

The only reasonably accurate paragraph is this: "And, more importantly, the lower energy range from 114 to just under 145 billion electron volts, a region of energy that Fermilab has determined, through earlier experiments, may harbor the Higgs, has not been ruled out.

Grooveshark's service-oriented approach makes them a clear safe harbor, and unless Grooveshark quickly sees legitimization as a marketing channel and gets "white-knighted" a la YouTube and Google, they will remain rogue and the media companies will keep hounding until they get at the jugular.

Harbor definitions

noun

a sheltered port where ships can take on or discharge cargo

See also: seaport haven harbour

noun

a place of refuge and comfort and security

See also: harbour

verb

maintain (a theory, thoughts, or feelings); "bear a grudge"; "entertain interesting notions"; "harbor a resentment"

See also: harbour hold entertain nurse

verb

secretly shelter (as of fugitives or criminals)

See also: harbour

verb

keep in one's possession; of animals

See also: harbour

verb

hold back a thought or feeling about; "She is harboring a grudge against him"

See also: harbour shield