According to the pottermore website, after Fred Weasley's death, the hand representing him fell off from the clock. It remained with 8 hands.
It went to "Home" and stayed there permanently. (I personally like this idea most, as it's where his family is) It followed George's hand on the clock for the rest of George's life. It fell off and George kept it with him.
Harry is never added to the clock (in the books at least) despite Mrs Weasley treating him like a son. We never see the clock again, we don't know if Fleur gets added after she marries Bill, or if Fred gets removed when he dies.
Located in the kitchen of the Burrow, the Weasley clock displayed the whereabouts of family members, rather than telling the time. Complete with nine golden hands - one for each family member, the clock would immediately change depending on someone's whereabouts.
There were no numerals around the face, but descriptions of where each family member might be. “Home,” “school,” and “work” were there, but there was also “traveling,” “lost,” “hospital,” “prison,” and, in the position where the number twelve would be on a normal clock, “mortal peril.”
If a wizard damaged their tooth, they would be well advised to visit a doctor or nurse skilled in the regrowing and straightening of teeth. At that point, the clock would turn to "DENTIST". In Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Hermione visits Madame Pomfrey and has her teeth 'fixed':
In the case of the Weasleys' attic, the ghoul is used as part of the ongoing illustration of the Weasley family's relative poverty; the idea, one supposes, is that rich families have house-elves to take care of them.
Dumbledore knew Harry and Ron were under the invisibility cloak at Hagrid's hut in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, as his eyes flickered in their direction.
Crack. Dead Harry ... This was made even more apparent in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, when Mrs Weasley gave Harry her late brother's watch for his seventeenth birthday.
Professor McGonagall gave Hermione Granger the Time-Turner at the start of her third year, allowing her to take multiple classes that overlap and would be impossible to attend in real-time.
Harry's Protection Against Lord Voldemort
Lily's sacrifice is partially how Harry survived Avada Kedavra in the forest. When Lily sacrificed herself to save Harry in Godric's Hollow, he was protected by magic's strongest defense: love.
While Charlie's character is very cool and interesting, he ultimately wasn't a major part of the overall story of Harry Potter. To save time to explore the most important storylines, Charlie's character was unfortunately cut.
Ginevra Molly Weasley (also known as Ginny) is the youngest child and only daughter of the Weasley family. She is Sorted into Slytherin during Harry and Jim Potter's second year.
As a result, many beloved characters, unfortunately, don't survive the series, and many of them leave a lasting impact on the characters and the audience. One of the most devastating deaths is Fred Weasley, who died fighting in the Battle of Hogwarts during Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
Hermione and Fred actually had a friendly platonic relationship in canon, despite the fact that Hermione didn't approve of some of the twins' antics. Even while she was a Prefect, it didn't affect their relationship. Fred and George often tried to lighten Hermione up by joking around with her.
It was George, not Fred. During the Polyjuice Chase, Snape saw that one of the genuine Death Eaters was drawing a bead on Remus, and tried to “accidentally” slash the guy's hand with Sectumsempra to make him miss. But Snape isn't very good on a broom and *he* missed, and clipped George's ear by mistake.
As an unqualified wizard who didn't finish his education, Hagrid was not technically allowed to perform magic. And yet, the beloved gamekeeper seemed very magical.
Ginny Weasley's boggart | Fandom. On Ginny's page, it says that her boggart is Voldemort.
As it turns out, her absence in the special is most likely part of her semiretirement from acting. Walters, already a British acting icon, became the beloved "mom" of a generation as the matriarch of the Weasley family, but that's far from her only claim to fame.
We sense that Harry's education in personal responsibility is all part of Dumbledore's grand plan in giving Harry the cloak, because after the dragon affair Dumbledore returns the cloak to Harry neatly folded.
Argus Filch is a Squib, a child of wizard parents who has the inability to use magic.
The Cloak of Invisibility, one of the three Deathly Hallows, given (anonymously) to Harry Potter as a Christmas gift by Albus Dumbledore. Artwork inspired by Harry Potter is a film series based on the eponymous novels by J. K. Rowling and the first movie released by Warner Bros in 2001.
However, when Bill Weasley was attacked by Greyback, he avoided the perils of becoming a werewolf because it wasn't a full moon. Greyback simply left Bill significantly scarred and with a new appreciation for rare steaks.
Weasley hates Fleur because she's "too pretty, too flighty, not as smart as Tonks". Fleur's arc is proving that she is as smart and strong as any other female character. It's not her fault she's so pretty when she couldn't control how she looked. She's not flighty or as rude as Hermione, Ginny and Molly think she is.
Lucius disdained the Weasley family for its poverty and so-called blood traitor status; while the Malfoys prized their pure-blood heritage, the Weasleys accepted Muggles and Muggle-borns.