The English term "harbour, port, harbor" matches the Dutch term "haven"

other english words that include "port" : dutch :
party, adherents, followers, supporters, disciples aanhang
supporter, adept, member aanhanger
supporter, adept adept
portrait beeltenis
serious, important belangrijk
supporter, adept beoefenaar
inform, communicate, report berichten
porter conciërge
porthole, skylight dakraam
deport deporteren
opportune, convenient, handy doelmatig
portable, stretcher draagbaar
entrance, portal entree
serious, very, quite, important erg
serious, earnest, important ernstig
portrait evenbeeld
proportional evenredig
rate, proportion evenredigheid
export exporteren
opportunity, happen, grow, occurence, occur gebeuren
occurence, opportunity gebeurtenis
deportment, behaviour gedrag
facile, handy, convenient, comfortable, opportune gemakkelijk
convenient, handy, seemly, appropriate, opportune geschikt
unimportant, good-hearted, benign goedaardig
position, attitude, deportment, behaviour houding
import importeren
opportunity, occurence incident
report, inform informeren
entrance, portal ingang
inform, report inlichten
import invoeren
supporters, party, following, disciples, adherents leden
airport luchthaven
shutter, porthole luik
opportunist meeloper
unimportant, conceited onbelangrijk
opportunist opportunist
transport overbrengen
passport, only pas
passport paspoort
skylight, porthole patrijspoort
portable portable
door, porter portier
portrait portret
Portugal Portugal
Portuguese Portugees
rate, proportion proportie
proportional proportioneel
lean, support, sustain schragen
sport sport
sportsman sportman
sportsman sportsman
support, groan, lean, sustain steunen
support, lean, sustain stutten
entrance, portal toegang
transport transporteren
introduce, equip, export, play uitvoeren
rate, proportion verhouding
wear, transport, carry voeren
indication, portent, presage, sign, omen voorbode
important, serious voornaam
sign, presage, indication, omen, portent voorteken
deportment, behaviour wandel
portico zuilengalerij
porch, portico zuilengang
Dutch as an Influencer
The English language has much to thank Dutch for. Dutch settlers came to the American colonies during the 17th century and added a few words to the vocabulary. Words like Santa Claus, waffle, blink, cookie, bazooka, gin, and iceberg wouldn’t exist without it.
Learning Dutch is Easier for English Speakers
Given the influence Dutch has had on English, it makes sense that Dutch is easier for speakers to learn. This is in part because Dutch, German, and English have similar roots. It’s between English and German. It only has two definite articles, “de” and “het” to English’s one “the” and German’s “der”, “die”, “das”. But Dutch words are more difficult to pronounce. The way words are pronounced indicates to a native speaker whether they’re talking to a second-language speaker.
Dutch is a Melting Pot of Languages
Just as English owes a lot to Dutch for contributing to its vocabulary, Dutch owes the same to other languages. It picked up words like jus d’orange (orange juice) and pantalon from French, mazzel (lucky) and tof (cool) from Hebrew and others. Dutch also incorporates texting and social media slang from English as well as street slang from places like Morocco, the Antilles, and Suriname.