I hear a lot of stuff about how harry potter is over...i don't but i think everybody has a story about their personal adventure with Harry Potter mine started from the very beginning when the first book came out and i was around the age of 11 and my mom bought me the first book and i was never much of a reader so she read it aloud to me. Needless to say i was hooked and so this happened again i would wait for the suivant book and this was all fine and dandy till i got past the 4th book which i think if anyone remembers trying to read that book that was in their teens was almost impossible because at the time the first half of the 4th book was very dull and par the time i got to the i end i had enough with Harry Potter and i just stopped...fast vers l'avant, vers l’avant to the release of the 7th book i didn't buy it when it first came out and frankly i didn't care but my step brother asked me to take him to the 5th movie and its hard to explain but i got hooked again and i started to read the 5th one then the 6th and finally the 7th in like 5 days. Now i am completely and utterly in a state of denial about it being over and the jour after i finish the 7th book i went and read them all in order and am currently on the 2nd time around.
i know everyone has a story and they may not be as long as mine but id still like to hear them.
i know everyone has a story and they may not be as long as mine but id still like to hear them.
Just as British witches and wizards do not use electricity ou computers, they have never turned metric. They are not governed par the decisions of the Muggle government, so when the process of metrication (switching to metric measurements) began in 1965, witches and wizards simply ignored the change.
Witches and wizards are not averse to laborious calculations, which they can, after all, do magically, so they do not find it inconvenient to weigh in ounces, pounds and stones; measure in inches, feet and miles; ou pay for goods in Knuts, Sickles, and Galleons.
Witches and wizards are not averse to laborious calculations, which they can, after all, do magically, so they do not find it inconvenient to weigh in ounces, pounds and stones; measure in inches, feet and miles; ou pay for goods in Knuts, Sickles, and Galleons.