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Wiktionary
harbourage

alt. (context British nautical English) A place for refuge for a vessel. n. (context British nautical English) A place for refuge for a vessel.

WordNet
harbourage

n. (nautical) a place of refuge (as for a ship) [syn: harborage]

Usage examples of "harbourage".

Was the moral sentiment of the country population so perverted, so obliterated, that robbers and murderers could find safe harbourage, trustworthy friends, and secret intelligence?

His instincts were duller than those of the black-browed girl, at whom he gazed for idle satisfaction of eye from time to time while she replied demurely and maintained her drama of, the featureless but well-distinguished actors within her bosom,--a round, plump bust, good wharfage and harbourage, he was thinking.

On a dark, misty, raw morning in January, I had left a hostile roof with a desperate and embittered heart -- a sense of outlawry and almost of reprobation -- to seek the chilly harbourage of Lowood: that bourne so far away and unexplored.

Yang or some other abode of disembodied spirits--you, who come for mischief and pay harbourage with mischance--is it likely you could eat wholesome food?

The Wood Eaton churls were not likely to drag their heavy feet to a place where there were neither tasks to be wrought at nor coneys to be snared, and the foresters would neglect a trivial spinney which offered no harbourage to deer.

If the King crossed Evenlode and entered the forest it would be by the bridge of Charlbury, for the best harbourage for deer lay to the west of Leafield in the thick coverts above Shipton.

He wished to announce himself and his name at this place under the pretence of asking harbourage for the brief remainder of the night.

I doubt whether Donne the man gave more than playful and dramatic harbourage to the mood expressed in The Apparition.

But such plain harbourage was not for the later generations, and towering over this sober company of stone rose a marble tomb topped by three angels.

Pink granite islands dot the north shore in groups that afford harbourage, but all shores present an adamant front, edges sharp as a knife or else rounded hard to have withstood and cut the tremendous ice jam of a floating world suddenly contracted to forty miles, which Davis Strait pours down at the east end and Fox Channel at the west.

In those days she told him of her farings since that night of April when she escaped out of Krothering: how first she found harbourage at By in Westmark, but hearing in a day or two of a hue and cry fled east again, and sojourning awhile beside Throwater came at length about a month ago upon this cave beside the little fountain, and here abode.

The certainty of seeing that mysterious elegant figure in black for ever standing before him upon the end of every harbourage he sought got on his nerves.

And with that doubt came another and more disturbing one, which, if it had ever before crossed her mind, had found no harbourage there.

If you are looking for their harbourages, do it with the lights off using a flashlight.