Citadel vs Haven - What's the difference?
citadel | haven |
A strong fortress that sits high above a city.
(sometimes, figurative) A stronghold or fortified place.
* 1836 , Alexander Slidell Mackenzie, The American in England (page 269)
A harbour or anchorage protected from the sea.
* Shakespeare
* Tennyson
(by extension) A place of safety; a refuge or sanctuary.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=December 21
, author=Helen Pidd
, title=Europeans migrate south as continent drifts deeper into crisis
, work=the Guardian
As nouns the difference between citadel and haven
is that citadel is a strong fortress that sits high above a city while haven is a harbour or anchorage protected from the sea.As a verb haven is
to put into, or provide with a haven.citadel
English
Noun
(en noun)- Intrenched within the citadel of our apartment, and cheered by the comfortings of a coal fire, we passed the day in letter-writing, conversation, or gazing from the sheltered security of our windows upon the agitated sea
Anagrams
* ----haven
English
Noun
(en noun)- what shipping and what lading's in our haven
- their haven under the hill
citation, page= , passage=Since its conception, the European Union has been a haven for those seeking refuge from war, persecution and poverty in other parts of the world.}}