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  1. Wizarding law, also known as magical law, was the system of rules that were created and enforced through social or governmental institutions to regulate behaviour. Magical law was a system that regulated and ensured that individuals or the wizarding community in general adhered to the will of...

  2. This category is for the various rules and regulations that were enforced in the wizarding world. A. Accreditation. Category:Anti-Muggle-born laws. C. Category:Combat-related laws. Category:Creature-related laws. D.

    • Food. This is the only exception of the five that is stated specifically in the books. In chapter 15 of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Hermione uses food as an example the first time she mentions the five exceptions
    • Money. We see an example of not being able to create money out of thin air in Chapter 28 of Goblet of Fire: “Count yer coins! An’ there’s no point in tryin’ to steal any, Goyle,” he added, his beetle-black eyes narrowed.
    • Intentional Curse Damage. Harry has been seriously injured several times throughout the books, and been magically healed each time, including having all the bones in his arm totally regrown from scratch.
    • Bringing a human being back from the dead. We’ve been told over and over again in the Harry Potter books that dead is dead. In Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, in the Battle of the Ministry, after Sirius has fallen through the veil, Lupin tells Harry
  3. Explore the terms J.K. Rowling uses throughout the Harry Potter series, including the characters, spells, animals, and more.

  4. Mar 16, 2019 · As McGonagall points out in Sorcerer’s Stone, the point system is meant to reward students for good deeds and punish them for bad ones. The system will ultimately break down if students begin to feel that the system doesn’t accurately reflect their actions.

  5. Blood status, [1] also called purity of blood, [2] was a concept in the wizarding world that distinguished between family trees that had different levels of magically-endowed members. It often resulted in prejudice towards those who had a large number of Muggles in their families.

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  7. Neither could live while the other lived, but neither could die while the other lived either: Harry was unknowingly safeguarding a piece of Voldemort's soul, and Voldemort kept the protection of Lily's sacrifice alive in both him and Harry by taking his blood (DH35).

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