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She would never have harboured a thought like that before.
It was the sort of fantasy she must not harbour.
Gone to make way for the fish brought to harbour"!
At best, this report will harbour a seed of doubt.
David Lee also could remember and continue to harbour resentment through long years.
Its primary focus was to harbour and encourage new writing.
"What made you think that your people harbour such hostile feelings toward us?"
Despite not being together anymore the two still harboured feelings for each other.
But he was too generous to harbour it for more than an instant.
"We have reason to believe that you are harbouring an alien presence."
It seems to me that we should not harbour unrealistic expectations.
The island has a large lagoon and harbouring is easy.
Some people harbour the illusion that negotiations could begin in one or two years' time.
Whether this is plague or no, I dare not harbour it.
The modern building was actually built around the chapel it now harbours.
He is looking forward to reaching the end of his long life, but also seems to harbour regrets.
It harbours several water springs, which made human habitat possible.
Good Heaven, that she should harbour designs upon his property!
However, the king may have harboured his father's concern that another woman would sit on the throne.
There are villages and harbour nearby where many restaurants can be found.
I cannot imagine that you still harbour any great fatherly love for him.
I'd long harboured an ambition to be a writer or journalist.
He would never serve at sea again, but still continued to harbour political and professional ambitions.
But she harboured a small, grudging respect for them, too.
We will harbour the same concerns where the forthcoming financial perspective is concerned.
The Earth is the only world known so far to harbor life.
It is also considered to harbor the voice of God.
Reason enough, again, to harbor the living arts in our time.
The other 80 percent do not even know they harbor the virus.
Here was one, at least, who could harbor love and compassion.
That such a place could harbor danger he knew well.
Whether he can still harbor such grand hopes now is not clear.
It looks almost natural enough to harbor a population of trout.
Those adults who still harbor some hope say two things are essential.
None can be found to harbor any entities at all.
Did one of them harbor a secret passion for her?
At least eight hundred million harbored some form of life.
But I think he's been harboring this knowledge for a long time.
These patients may harbor concerns about the power of drugs in their lives.
Who would have thought that a little old baby could harbor so much rage?
Did they expect her to be harboring a major military force?
"The machines now harbor all the information this world will need to build a better future."
It just was, and he harbored his resources for those times when they were really needed.
Still, most harbor the immigrants' dream of a new beginning.
Though she may not harbor opinions, others, especially critics, have them about her work.
A high school student who still harbors feelings for a girl he met 10 years ago.
But so far it is hard to find those who harbor ill will toward the new restaurant.
A young girl's face harbors a century's worth of trouble and fear.
"A secret harbored for many years can be the piece of evidence we need to make our case."
Like his studio at home, it harbored more business than art.