Hag (insult)
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Glossary • Insults, Curses, and Interjections
Hag is an insulting name used for a particularly unpleasant or cruel woman. Read MoreHamper
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Food and drinks • Glossary
A large basket or wickerwork packing-case with a cover used to pack or transport food and/or drink (what in the U.S. would be called a picnic basket). By extension, the term is also used to refer to a present of a consignment of food in any type of case or… Read MoreWe might as well be hanged for a dragon as an egg
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Glossary Happy Christmas
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Glossary
Equivalent to “merry Christmas”, of course. Worthy of mention because “happy Christmas”, while perfectly understandable, is not the form commonly used in the U.S. Read MoreHatstall
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Glossary
Archaic term referring to a person who takes more than five minutes to be sorted by the Sorting Hat (Pm). Read MoreHaversack
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Glossary
A bag or backpack for carrying food on an outdoor trip. … Read MoreHeadlamp
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Glossary
U.S.: headlight. Read MoreHelter-skelter
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Glossary
A helter-skelter is an amusement park ride, often in the form of a lighthouse, which consists of a spiral slide running around the outside of a whimsical structure. Riders sit on burlap sacks or other simple things like that and slide down. Read MoreHogsmeaders
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Glossary • Titles, nicknames, and honorifics
Term for residents of Hogsmeade (OP25). Read MoreHogwartians
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Glossary • Titles, nicknames, and honorifics
Term for the students and staff of Hogwarts (DH32). Read MoreHogwort
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Glossary • Plants
A small plant typically found in the southern United States. Rowling saw hogwort at Kew Gardens circa 1992 and the name stuck in her mind. Read MoreHoley
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Glossary Holidaymakers
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Glossary
Someone on holiday, i.e., on vacation. Read MoreHolidays
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Glossary
In Britain, “holiday” can refer to any day or time off (as in leave from work) rather than just a vacation or official holiday. National holidays are usually called Bank Holidays, because the banks are closed. Read MoreHosepipe
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Glossary
Garden hose. Read MoreHumbug
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Glossary
Hard candy pieces, usually flavoured with peppermint and recognisable by their black and white stripes. They are often round-ended but can be seen as angular lumps. Read More