Explain This Passage
allies426
AllieS426 at aol.com
Wed Jan 9 18:18:00 UTC 2008
No: HPFGUIDX 180512
--- In HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com, "Steve" <bboyminn at ...> wrote:
>
> Harry is a full-blood, and I acknowledge that term doesn't
> appear in the books, but it best describes Harry's
> situation. He has two magical parents, but on his mother's
> side, he has no magical history. She, Lily, is the progeny
> of muggles. But as is already noted, she is a fully magical
> person. Harry, therefore, is the progeny of two magical
> people making him fully magical.
>
Allie:
I wonder what Harry and Ginny's children would be considered.
Harry, being "half-blood," and Ginny being "pureblood," would that
make them 3/4 bloods? :) For how many generations must one's
parents be magical before one is considered pureblood?
Even most muggleborn children will marry witches/wizards (since they
will be surrounded by them for most of their lives), so
theoretically the number of "Fullbloods" will be GROWING, even if
the number of "Purebloods" is shrinking.
Allie
Who likes Steve's new term
More information about the HPforGrownups
archive