different between enharbour vs unharbour
enharbour
English
Alternative forms
- enharbor
Etymology
en- +? harbour
Verb
enharbour (third-person singular simple present enharbours, present participle enharbouring, simple past and past participle enharboured)
- (transitive) To find harbour or safety in; to dwell in or inhabit.
- 1613, William Browne, Britannia's Pastorals
- O true delight, enharbouring the breasts
Of those sweet creatures with the plumy crests
- O true delight, enharbouring the breasts
- 1613, William Browne, Britannia's Pastorals
enharbour From the web:
unharbour
English
Alternative forms
- unharbor
Etymology
un- +? harbour
Verb
unharbour (third-person singular simple present unharbours, present participle unharbouring, simple past and past participle unharboured)
- (transitive) To drive from harbour or shelter.
unharbour From the web:
- what harbour means
- what harbour did the titanic leave from
- what harbour town
- what's harbour bridge
- what's harbours
- what harbour city
- what is harbour freight
- what are harbour jeans
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- enharbour vs unharbour
- festers vs jesters
- fasters vs festers
- festers vs fewters
- fosters vs festers
- festers vs esters
- testers vs texters
- testes vs testers
- testers vs testerns
- testers vs jesters
- tasters vs testers
- lass vs lasses
- lasses vs gasses
- lasses vs laisses
- lasses vs rasses
- lasses vs masses
- lasses vs passes
- lasses vs asses
- lapsers vs lappers
- ticced vs sicced