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[[File:Normal gof chp03.jpg|thumb|A letter Molly Weasley sent to the Dursleys via Muggle Mail.]]
 
[[File:Normal gof chp03.jpg|thumb|A letter Molly Weasley sent to the Dursleys via Muggle Mail.]]
 
{{Quote|No post on Sundays, no damn letters today —|[[Vernon Dursley]] hopes for a reprieve from Harry Potter's Hogwarts acceptance letters due to the normal progression of the Muggle post system.|Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone}}
 
{{Quote|No post on Sundays, no damn letters today —|[[Vernon Dursley]] hopes for a reprieve from Harry Potter's Hogwarts acceptance letters due to the normal progression of the Muggle post system.|Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone}}
'''Muggle Mail''' was the general [[Wizardkind|Wizarding]] term for the post system used by [[Muggle]]s to send [[letter]]s. Letters sent by this system generally required the presence of at least one stamp, a pre-paid form of postage. When [[Molly Weasley|Mrs. Weasley]] sent a [[letter]] to the [[Dursleys]], she was unfamiliar with the requirements regarding this and posted her letter with stamps covering every area on the envelope not used to write the addresses. A letter also need an address to whom it is going to. While it is successful for Muggles, it isn't quite as convenient as its [[Wizarding world|wizarding]] counterpart, [[owl post]], which is able find an addressee regardless of their current location and only requires payment if the possessor does not own their own [[owl]], barring special arrangements such as the [[owlery]] at [[Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry]].
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'''Muggle Mail''' was the general [[Wizardkind|Wizarding]] term for the post system used by [[Muggle]]s to send [[letter]]s. Letters sent by this system generally required the presence of at least one stamp, a pre-paid form of postage. When [[Molly Weasley|Mrs. Weasley]] sent a [[letter]] to the [[Dursleys]], she was unfamiliar with the requirements regarding this and posted her letter with stamps covering every area on the envelope not used to write the addresses. A letter also need an address to whom it is going to. While it is successful for Muggles, it isn't quite as convenient as its [[Wizarding world|wizarding]] counterpart, [[owl post]], which is able find an addressee regardless of their current location and only requires payment if the possessor does not own their own [[owl]], barring special arrangements such as the [[owlery]] at [[Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry]]. Post across international lines is also regulated by [[Customs]].
   
 
In [[1995]], [[Nymphadora Tonks]] sent a letter to the Dursleys informing them that they had been short-listed for the [[All-England Best-Kept Lawn competition]]. The fictitious competition was actually a ruse to get [[Harry Potter|Harry]] out of the house so that the [[Advance Guard]] could spirit him away to [[12 Grimmauld Place]].
 
In [[1995]], [[Nymphadora Tonks]] sent a letter to the Dursleys informing them that they had been short-listed for the [[All-England Best-Kept Lawn competition]]. The fictitious competition was actually a ruse to get [[Harry Potter|Harry]] out of the house so that the [[Advance Guard]] could spirit him away to [[12 Grimmauld Place]].

Revision as of 20:07, 27 December 2012

Normal gof chp03

A letter Molly Weasley sent to the Dursleys via Muggle Mail.

"No post on Sundays, no damn letters today —"
Vernon Dursley hopes for a reprieve from Harry Potter's Hogwarts acceptance letters due to the normal progression of the Muggle post system.[src]

Muggle Mail was the general Wizarding term for the post system used by Muggles to send letters. Letters sent by this system generally required the presence of at least one stamp, a pre-paid form of postage. When Mrs. Weasley sent a letter to the Dursleys, she was unfamiliar with the requirements regarding this and posted her letter with stamps covering every area on the envelope not used to write the addresses. A letter also need an address to whom it is going to. While it is successful for Muggles, it isn't quite as convenient as its wizarding counterpart, owl post, which is able find an addressee regardless of their current location and only requires payment if the possessor does not own their own owl, barring special arrangements such as the owlery at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Post across international lines is also regulated by Customs.

In 1995, Nymphadora Tonks sent a letter to the Dursleys informing them that they had been short-listed for the All-England Best-Kept Lawn competition. The fictitious competition was actually a ruse to get Harry out of the house so that the Advance Guard could spirit him away to 12 Grimmauld Place.

There is no post on Sundays, to the delight of Vernon Dursley, who incorrectly believed that this restriction would prevent the arrival of anymore Hogwarts acceptance letters for Harry Potter on Sunday.

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