Difference between revisions of "Hagrid"
WilliamsRDan (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Category:CharactersCategory:HP1C1 IntroductionsCategory:ProfessorsCategory:Order of the Phoenix ''J.K. Rowling said, "Hagrid is also another old English word m...") |
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* Feet like baby dolphins in leather boots | * Feet like baby dolphins in leather boots | ||
* Vast, muscular arms | * Vast, muscular arms | ||
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| + | * Has an issue with saying more than he should | ||
| + | ** Tells [[Minerva McGonagall]] that he would be taking Harry to the [[The Dursleys|Dursley]]'s. | ||
Revision as of 21:26, 29 October 2024
J.K. Rowling said, "Hagrid is also another old English word meaning if you were hagrid... you’d had a bad night. Hagrid’s a big drinker. He has a lot of bad nights." Grid was a Norse giantess known for having a terrible temper. "Ha" is a variant of the Old West Norse name element "half." So "Hagrid" may just mean "half-grid" or more notably, "half-giant." "Haggard" can also mean "appearing worn and exhausted, gaunt," "wild or distraught in appearance," and "a disheveled individual." From The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy, the Old English term hag-rid means "indigestion" and is found in the exact same paragraph as "Dumbledore." Coincidence?
- Half-giant
- Mother was a giantess
- Father was a tiny little man
- Introduced as flying a huge motorcycle
- Borrowed from Sirius Black
- Bringing Harry Potter to Number Four Privet Drive
- Almost twice as tall as a normal man, and at least five times as wide
- Looks too big to be allowed,
- and so wild
- Long tangles of bushy black hair and beard hid most of his face
- Hands the size of trash can lids
- Feet like baby dolphins in leather boots
- Vast, muscular arms
- Has an issue with saying more than he should
- Tells Minerva McGonagall that he would be taking Harry to the Dursley's.