Thursday, December 21, 2006

Healthy Owl Lads

In case you haven't heard . . .

Spooky!

I love big Harry Potter announcements because they turn all of us into crazed English teachers. "Hallows": Verb? Noun? What's the significance of the article "the"? If we diagram this title -- or better yet, anagram it -- what will it reveal? (Anagrams for the last two words of this title include "yellow dahl hats," "hallway shed lot," and "lewdly oath lash.") Much fun.

3 comments:

  1. I trotted off to good old online Websters...

    Main Entry: hal·low

    Function: transitive verb
    Etymology: Middle English halowen, from Old English hAlgian, from hAlig holy -- more at HOLY
    1 : to make holy or set apart for holy use
    2 : to respect greatly : VENERATE

    Halloween? Horcruxs? I hope Harry isn't a Horcrux. He can be a Hallow. Noun. Hallows is definitely a noun.

    (Screams into pillow and tears hair) But what does it mean? Please don't say that it means Ron dies.

    I've been babbling all day.

    Marilyn

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  2. Right you are, Madame Hotttttness, right you are :-) Happy theorizing!

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  3. Check out this website which I found through a children's writer's chatboard: http://www.mystical-www.co.uk/arthuriana2z/h.htm

    Scroll down to "hallows" and then it might seem more clear. Think horcruxes.

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