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harbour

  • 1 Harbour

    subs.
    P. and V. λιμήν, ὁ, ὅρμος, ὁ, ναύσταθμον, τό (Eur., Rhes.).
    With good harbour, adj: V. εὔορμος.
    Place of refuge: P. and V. καταφυγή, ἡ, ποστροφή, ἡ, P. ἀποφυγή, ἡ, V. πύργος, ὁ.
    Bring into harbour, v.: Ar. and P. κατγειν (acc.), P. κατακομίζειν (acc.).
    Sail into harbour: P. καταπλεῖν.
    ——————
    v. trans.
    Receive: P. and V. δέχεσθαι, εἰσδέχεσθαι, Ar. and P. ποδέχεσθαι; see Admit.
    Harbour (feelings, etc.): P. and V. ἔχειν, φυλάσσειν, τρέφειν (Plat.).

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Harbour

  • 2 harbour

    1. noun
    (a place of shelter for ships: All the ships stayed in (the) harbour during the storm.) λιμάνι
    2. verb
    1) (to give shelter or refuge to (a person): It is against the law to harbour criminals.) υποθάλπω,παρέχω άσυλο σε
    2) (to have (usually bad) thoughts in one's head: He harbours a grudge against me.) τρέφω ενδόμυχα

    English-Greek dictionary > harbour

  • 3 harbour

    1) λιμάνι
    2) φυγαδεύω
    3) φωλιάζω

    English-Greek new dictionary > harbour

  • 4 harbour-master

    noun (the official in charge of a harbour.) λιμενάρχης

    English-Greek dictionary > harbour-master

  • 5 Harbour-dues

    subs.
    P. ἐλλιμενικὰ τέλη.
    Collector of harbour dues: P. ἐλλιμενιστής. ὁ.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Harbour-dues

  • 6 basin

    ['beisn]
    1) (a bowl for washing oneself in: a wash-hand basin.) λεκάνη
    2) (a wide, open dish for preparing food in: a pudding-basin.) λεκάνη
    3) (the area drained by a river: the basin of the Nile.) λεκάνη ποταμού
    4) (the deep part of a harbour: There were four yachts anchored in the harbour basin.) `λεκάνη` λιμανιού

    English-Greek dictionary > basin

  • 7 port

    I [po:t] noun
    1) ((usually without a or the) a harbour: The ship came into port; We reached port next morning.) λιμάνι
    2) (a town with a harbour: the port of Hull.) λιμάνι
    II [po:t] noun
    (the left side of a ship or aircraft: The helmsman steered the ship to port; ( also adjective) the port wing.) αριστερή πλευρά πλοίου
    III [po:t] noun
    (a strong, dark-red, sweet wine originally from Portugal.) πορτό

    English-Greek dictionary > port

  • 8 dock

    I 1. [dok] noun
    1) (a deepened part of a harbour etc where ships go for loading, unloading, repair etc: The ship was in dock for three weeks.) αποβάθρα,μώλος,δεξαμενή
    2) (the area surrounding this: He works down at the docks.) αποβάθρα
    3) (the box in a law court where the accused person sits or stands.) εδώλιο
    2. verb
    (to (cause to) enter a dock and tie up alongside a quay: The liner docked in Southampton this morning.) δένω
    - dockyard II [dok] verb
    (to cut short or remove part from: The dog's tail had been docked; His wages were docked to pay for the broken window.) περικόπτω

    English-Greek dictionary > dock

  • 9 dockyard

    noun (a naval harbour with docks, stores etc.) ναυπηγείο, ναύσταθμος

    English-Greek dictionary > dockyard

  • 10 flow

    [fləu] 1. verb
    1) (to move along in the way that water does: The river flowed into the sea.) κυλώ,ρέω,χύνομαι
    2) ((of the tide) to rise: The boat left the harbour when the tide began to flow.) ανεβαίνω
    2. noun
    (the act of flowing: a flow of blood; the flow of traffic.) ροή

    English-Greek dictionary > flow

  • 11 haven

    ['heivn]
    (a harbour; a place of safety or rest.) λιμάνι,καταφύγιο

    English-Greek dictionary > haven

  • 12 idle

    1. adjective
    1) (not working; not in use: ships lying idle in the harbour.) αργόσχολος,άπρακτος/αχρησιμοποίητος
    2) (lazy: He has work to do, but he's idle and just sits around.) τεμπέλης
    3) (having no effect or result: idle threats.) κενός
    4) (unnecessary; without good reason or foundation: idle fears; idle gossip.) αβάσιμος,άσκοπος
    2. verb
    1) (to be idle or do nothing: On holiday they just idled from morning till night.) χασομερώ,τεμπελιάζω
    2) (of an engine etc, to run gently without doing any work: They kept the car engine idling while they checked their position with the map.) δουλεύω στο ραλαντί
    - idleness
    - idly
    - idle away

    English-Greek dictionary > idle

  • 13 low tide/water

    (the time when the sea is lowest at a particular place during ebb-tide: There is three feet of water in the harbour, even at low water.) άμπωτη

    English-Greek dictionary > low tide/water

  • 14 mouth

    1. plural - mouths; noun
    1) (the opening in the head by which a human or animal eats and speaks or makes noises: What has the baby got in its mouth?) στόμα
    2) (the opening or entrance eg of a bottle, river etc: the mouth of the harbour.) στόμιο
    2. verb
    (to move the lips as if forming (words), but without making any sound: He mouthed the words to me so that no-one could overhear.) προσφέρω με τα χείλη χωρίς ήχο
    - mouth-organ
    - mouthpiece
    - mouthwash

    English-Greek dictionary > mouth

  • 15 pilot

    1. noun
    1) (a person who flies an aeroplane: The pilot and crew were all killed in the air crash.) πιλότος
    2) (a person who directs a ship in and out of a harbour, river, or coastal waters.) πληγός
    2. adjective
    (experimental: a pilot scheme (= one done on a small scale, eg to solve certain problems before a larger, more expensive project is started).) πειραματικός, πιλοτικός
    3. verb
    (to guide as a pilot: He piloted the ship/plane.) πληγώ,πιλοτάρω

    English-Greek dictionary > pilot

  • 16 put

    [put]
    present participle - putting; verb
    1) (to place in a certain position or situation: He put the plate in the cupboard; Did you put any sugar in my coffee?; He put his arm round her; I'm putting a new lock on the door; You're putting too much strain on that rope; When did the Russians first put a man into space?; You've put me in a bad temper; Can you put (=translate) this sentence into French?) τοποθετώ,βάζω
    2) (to submit or present (a proposal, question etc): I put several questions to him; She put her ideas before the committee.) υποβάλλω
    3) (to express in words: He put his refusal very politely; Children sometimes have such a funny way of putting things!) εκφράζω,διατυπώνω
    4) (to write down: I'm trying to write a letter to her, but I don't know what to put.) γράφω
    5) (to sail in a particular direction: We put out to sea; The ship put into harbour for repairs.) πλέω
    - a put-up job
    - put about
    - put across/over
    - put aside
    - put away
    - put back
    - put by
    - put down
    - put down for
    - put one's feet up
    - put forth
    - put in
    - put in for
    - put off
    - put on
    - put out
    - put through
    - put together
    - put up
    - put up to
    - put up with

    English-Greek dictionary > put

  • 17 seaward(s)

    adverb (towards the sea; away from the land: The yacht left the harbour and sailed seawards.) προς τη θάλασσα

    English-Greek dictionary > seaward(s)

  • 18 seaward(s)

    adverb (towards the sea; away from the land: The yacht left the harbour and sailed seawards.) προς τη θάλασσα

    English-Greek dictionary > seaward(s)

  • 19 shipping

    noun (ships taken as a whole: The harbour was full of shipping.) ναυτιλία/σκάφη

    English-Greek dictionary > shipping

  • 20 silt up

    (to (cause to) become blocked by mud etc: The harbour had gradually silted up, so that large boats could no longer use it.) φράζω με λάσπη

    English-Greek dictionary > silt up

См. также в других словарях:

  • Harbour — Project Класс языка: императивный, структурированный, объектно ориентированный Автор(ы): Antonio Linares Релиз: 3.0.0 Тестовая версия …   Википедия

  • Harbour — (Harbor, englisch Hafen ) steht für: Harbour (Compiler), einen Open Source Compiler Harbour ist der Familienname von: David Harbour (* 1975), US amerikanischer Schauspieler Dorothy Harbour (* 1959), US amerikanische Psychotherapeutin Matthew… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • harbour — har‧bour [ˈhɑːbə ǁ ˈhɑːrbər] , harbor noun [countable] an area of calm water next to the land, where boats arrive and leave: • The island has a fine modern harbour. • The harbour master (= someone in charge of a harbour ) may request the ship… …   Financial and business terms

  • Harbour — (spr. Harb r), 1) (H. Grace, spr. H. Grehs), Hauptstadt des Districts Conception Bai der Provinz (Insel) Neufundland (Britisch Nordamerika) an der Westküste der Conception Bai; 6000 Ew.; fruchtbare Umgegend; 2) (H. Island, spr. H. Eiländ), Insel… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • harbour — British English spelling of HARBOR (Cf. harbor) (n. and v.); for spelling, see OR (Cf. or) …   Etymology dictionary

  • harbour — is spelt our in BrE and harbor in AmE …   Modern English usage

  • harbour — (US harbor) ► NOUN ▪ a place on the coast where ships may moor in shelter. ► VERB 1) keep (a thought or feeling) secretly in one s mind. 2) give a refuge or shelter to. 3) carry the germs of (a disease). ORIGIN Old English, «shelter» …   English terms dictionary

  • harbour — [här′bər] n., vt., vi. Brit. sp. of HARBOR …   English World dictionary

  • Harbour — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Harbour désigne le plus souvent un port maritime. Sommaire 1 Localités 1.1 Australie …   Wikipédia en Français

  • harbour — (BrE) (AmE harbor) noun ADJECTIVE ▪ deep, deep water ▪ good, safe, sheltered ▪ natural ▪ bus …   Collocations dictionary

  • harbour — I UK [ˈhɑː(r)bə(r)] / US [ˈhɑrbər] noun [countable] Word forms harbour : singular harbour plural harbours ** a) an area of water near the land where it is safe for boats to stay. A port is a harbour where passengers and goods can be taken on and… …   English dictionary

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