They docked at the harbour.
The harbour was closed due to the recent storm.
Excuse me, can you tell me where the harbour is, please?
(NOTE:
Harbour is the British English spelling, used in the UK, Australia and so on.
Harbor is the US English spelling, used in the United States).
The boat drove to the New York harbor.
It is against the law to harbor a fugitive.
I harbored a suspicion about him after I saw his dishonest behavior.
You seem to harbor a grudge.
The entry to the harbor was blockaded by the pirate fleet.
That is the correct US spelling of "harbor." The UK spelling is harbour.
Her remark harboured in my mind.
The ships were harboured at the dock. I'm not so sure about them though.
The harbour in Halifax is the deepest natural harbour in the world.
Don't harbor a fugitive from the law. The harbor waters were calm and blue.
use it by saying- how can you use the word ebullient in a sentence?
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
How do you use the word decibel in a sentence?What is decibel used for?
You can use the word feces in a sentence to mean excrement.
The word "mainstay" is a noun. An example of a sentence containing the word would be: Tourism is the mainstay of this small harbor town.
A sentence with the word harbor might include: "The boats are docked in the harbor." A harbor is an area where boats are docked or stored.
The road follows the precinct wall down to the harbor.
i went to the harbor The boat anchored near the harbor.
I parked my boat at a harbor
A harbor is for docking ships.
The ship arrived in the harbour after a month tour in the sea.
The boat motored into the harbor. The harbor was full of sailboats.
The harbor was loading with ships of all sizes.
Don't harbor a fugitive from the law. The harbor waters were calm and blue.
In the early morning, the ship pulled into the harbor.
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.