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Have te noticed the similarity between 'Avada Kedavra' and 'Abracadabra'?

One used to kill and the other we used to say while playing when we were kids! Strange Rowling chose that spell which was always innocently used! But I liked her choice :D
 keep_smiling posted più di un anno fa
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Harry Potter Risposte

HaleyDewit said:
Please don't tell me te came up with that just now...
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posted più di un anno fa 
Jeffersonian said:
Actually Abracadabra was probably originally used in the Shakespearean play Macbeth da witches who were anything but innocent (they caused the downfall of the tragic hero and their potion included ingredients such as Turk's nose and Liver of a blaspheming Jew.) so that's probably where J.K. got the spell from.
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posted più di un anno fa 
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That's pretty interesting.
zanhar1 posted più di un anno fa
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I'm Leggere Macbeth in English right now and when I heard the witches use Abracadabra I figured that Shakespeare was probably the coiner of the phrase.
Jeffersonian posted più di un anno fa
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Yeah, I noticed that.
Jeffersonian posted più di un anno fa
Rasberry10126 said:
Of coarse! It was an amazing choice!
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posted più di un anno fa 
LifesGoodx3 said:
It was pretty much the first thought I had when I read about Avada Kedavra for the first time.
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posted più di un anno fa 
zanhar1 said:
Dude that's how I used to pronounce it!
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posted più di un anno fa 
ecpjll said:
not until now :)
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posted più di un anno fa 
casmira said:
Sorry but, NO DUH! I noticed that like, first thing.... pay più attention...sorry.... my opinion not yours though!
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posted più di un anno fa 
Caloria said:
Duh.
My friend shouted that to me before I read the books. Then I read them, and kicked him in the shins :)
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posted più di un anno fa 
dancergirl78 said:
Yes, I've noticed that, and I think J.K. Rowling did that on purpose...
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posted più di un anno fa 
tempecordylois said:
maybe J.K likes magic trics
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posted più di un anno fa 
dracofan001 said:
well yeah and i thought it was stupid for doing that until i payed attention in my ELAR class. a parently "Cadaver" means "Dead body" o "Corpse"(i cant spell so deal with it) so i always thought thats how they thought of "Kedavra".

so kiddies it helps to listen in ELAR :P
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posted più di un anno fa 
noobio7143 said:
lool yeah i noticed that like the first time i saw it
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posted più di un anno fa 
owlhead7 said:
Abracadabra is actually Aramaic for "let the thing be destroyed". J.K. Rowling made that into Avada Kedavra, because basically the thing getting destoyed is the person o object in front of you.
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 Abracadabra is actually Aramaic for "let the thing be destroyed". J.K. Rowling made that into Avada Kedavra, because basically the thing getting destoyed is the person o object in front of you.
posted più di un anno fa 
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