No. The word hallow is a verb, to hallow, generally meaning to consecrate ("to make holy").
Hallow- to make holy; sanctify; consecrate. Sentence: Lord, hallow be thy name.
There is no Hallow in Harry Potter with that name.
(if british) hallow, how are you chap!
Hallow's Victim was created in 1985-08.
you have just used hollowness in a sentence
One is St. Hallow's Eve. i think all hallows eve is one
Partian? do you mean patrician? is so..pa·tri·cian   [puh-trish-uhn] Show IPA noun1.a person of noble or high rank; aristocratthats the definition hope it helped (-:
Anne is the person Deathly Hallow's is dedicated to.
An antonym for hallow (to make holy) is desecrate.Another answerHallow: its antonym is degrade.
hallow is used in American English. It means to sanctify.
One Hallow; the elder wand, is used just like a normal wand, but it is unbeatable. The second Hallow; the resurrection stone, is used to bring back the dead, but they aren't really alive, they are similar to ghosts, and no one can see them except the person who summoned them. The third Hallow; the invisibility cloak, grants the wearer complete invisibility