Seen/Mentioned: Used by Fleur Delacour in 1994 to extinguish her skirt, which had caught flame during a fight against a dragon. Aguamenti (Water-Making Spell) Type: Charm, Conjurationĭescription: Produces a clean, drinkable jet of water from the wand tip. When Fred and George Weasley attempted to circumvent it with Ageing Potions, and ended up in the Hospital Wing with fine white beards, along with other students who tried similar tactics. Seen/Mentioned: Used by Albus Dumbledore to stop underage students from entering their names into the Goblet of Fire. ( Age Line) Type: Charm Description: Prevents people above or below a certain age from access to a target. It is also possible to bewitch items to become unaffected from this charm, as is the case with most bought goods. It is, however, possible to move a creature by summoning things they are wearing or holding. It is also unable to summon Horcruxes as they have protective enchantments placed on them. Notes: The Summoning Charm is unable to directly summon exceptionally large targets such as buildings, or living creatures (except for Flobberworms which aren't considered to be worth summoning). The twins used it to summon their brooms from Dolores Umbridge's officeĮtymology: The Latin word accio means "I call" or "I summon". Molly Weasley used it to get the twins' candy. Also, in the Battle of the Seven Potters Harry summoned Hagrid when he fell. Seen/Mentioned: Harry Potter summoned his broom to complete the first task of the Triwizard Tournament in 1994, and to summon the Portkey to escape Voldemort and the Death Eaters in the Little Hangleton graveyard in 1995. The caster doesn't necessarily need to know the location of the target as long as they say the name of the object to be summoned, such as when Hermione Granger summoned some books from Dumbledore's office simply by saying "Accio Horcrux books!" while in Gryffindor Tower. This spell needs thought behind it, and the object must be clear in the caster's mind before trying to summon it. It is able to summon objects in direct line of sight of the caster, as well as things out of view, by calling the object aloud after the incantation (unless the spell is casted nonverbally). Pronunciation: Various, including: AK-ee-oh or AK-see-oh, AK-see-oh, AS-see-oh (US), and AT-chee-oh (Anglo-Catholic pronunciation)ĭescription: Summons an object towards the caster. txt file is free by clicking on the export iconĬite as source (bibliography): Name of Geometric Shapes on dCode.A Aberto (Opening Charm) Type: Charm Pronunciation: Ah-bare-toh Description: A spell used to open doors it is probably related to Alohamora. The copy-paste of the page "Name of Geometric Shapes" or any of its results, is allowed (even for commercial purposes) as long as you cite dCode!Įxporting results as a. Except explicit open source licence (indicated Creative Commons / free), the "Name of Geometric Shapes" algorithm, the applet or snippet (converter, solver, encryption / decryption, encoding / decoding, ciphering / deciphering, breaker, translator), or the "Name of Geometric Shapes" functions (calculate, convert, solve, decrypt / encrypt, decipher / cipher, decode / encode, translate) written in any informatic language (Python, Java, PHP, C#, Javascript, Matlab, etc.) and all data download, script, or API access for "Name of Geometric Shapes" are not public, same for offline use on PC, mobile, tablet, iPhone or Android app! Ask a new question Source codeĭCode retains ownership of the "Name of Geometric Shapes" source code. The square, like the trapezoid, the rhombus, or the parallelogram are quadrilaterals (with 4 sides) which have particularities (such as parallel sides or equal angles). Here is a table of all the regular geometric shapes/polyhedron of 3D space (table of names of n-faced polyhedra): Monogon (impossible figure in Euclidean geometry) Here is the list as a table of all the different regular geometric shapes of the 2D plane (table of n-sided polygon names): # More generally, polygons are written with a prefix indicating their number of sides and the suffix -gon.
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