It can be used as a noun (during the storm the ships stayed in the harbor) and also as a verb (it is illegal to harbor a criminal).
Harbor is a noun (a harbor) and a verb (to harbor).
Harbor has no antonyms as it is a noun or verb but not an adjective.
Yes, harbor is a common noun. If you were talking about a particular harbor, then it would be a proper noun. Ex. Pearl Harbor -Proper Noun Ex. Crystal Harbor -Proper Noun
no
The noun harbor is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word a place on a coast where vessels may find shelter, often having docks, piers, and other structure to accommodate vessels. A noun is used in a sentence as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Example:A port is often built in a harbor, but every harbor does not have a port.
It is a proper noun. That means it should be capitalised: Southhamption Harbor.
The plural of harbor is harbors. In British English the singular is harbour and the plural is harbours.
The noun 'harbour' (US spelling 'harbor') is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a place on a coast where vessels may find shelter; a word for a physical place. The word 'harbour' is also a verb.
It can be a verb as in, "it is illegal to harbor a criminal".
The noun 'porpoises' is a general noun for any of this species. A specific noun for the species is a harbor porpoise or vaquita porpoise. The noun 'porpoises' is a specific noun as a word for a species of sea mammals.
harbor (noun) : port, dock, pier, anchorage, mooring, landing, bay, inlet, cove harbor (verb) : shelter, house, lodgea dock shore or deck
The noun 'harbour' (in the US 'harbor') is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a place on a coast where vessels may find shelter; a word for a physical place.The word 'harbour' (harbor) is also a verb: harbour, harbours, harbouring, harboured.