Citations:Padfoot

Proper noun: a character of Harry Potter

 * Did they ever say who Moony, Padfoot, Prongs, or Wormtail from the Marauder's Map were or why they were called that? They say that they are making 4 right now. The name Wormtail is very important in that book....
 * The entire backstory involving how and why Sirius, James and Peter became Animagi is gone. As is the explanation of the names Moony, Padfoot, Wormtail and Prongs.
 * Actually, Sirius gave Harry a Firebolt (how's that for a call name?), after his Nimbus 2000 was smashed by the Whomping Willow.
 * I don't think anyone mentioned that besides his code name "Snuffles", Sirius' nickname among his school friends was Padfoot. (Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot & Prongs).
 * Actually, Sirius gave Harry a Firebolt (how's that for a call name?), after his Nimbus 2000 was smashed by the Whomping Willow.
 * I don't think anyone mentioned that besides his code name "Snuffles", Sirius' nickname among his school friends was Padfoot. (Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot & Prongs).
 * I don't think anyone mentioned that besides his code name "Snuffles", Sirius' nickname among his school friends was Padfoot. (Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot & Prongs).

Proper noun: a legendary dog

 * The black dog that stalked you was often called Padfoot, and it was also felt that looking him in the eye was a harbinger of doom, probably because you didn't want to find out it was you he'd come to scare the **** out of.
 * In the Quantock Hills of Somerset the black dog was frequently seen and called the 'Gurt Dog'. Cornwall has various tales of the 'Devil's Dandy (or Dando) Dogs', Devon has the 'Yeth (Heath) or Wisht Hounds. Other local names include Barguest, Black Shag, Padfoot or Hooter. Just to be different, in West Yorkshire the common name is 'Guytrash'; in Lancashire this is reduced to 'Trash' or changed to 'Skriker'.
 * There are quite a few similar legends of "Black dogs"; in the East Anglia part of the UK, they were referred to as "Black Shuck". Other names for them are "Padfoot", "Barguest", or "Shrike". They are generally viewed as a portent of death, or approaching evil.
 * The person who asked about the black dog - did you mean Padfoot or Old Shuck, the black dog of European myth?
 * Sorry if someone else mentioned this and I missed it...But Padfoot is a large blackdog, bigger than the average and can mean death is iminent (but death omens frequently mean change in one's life, not the literal loss of it.)
 * I think there are a number of Padfoot legends. In Horbury - near Wakefield - there's a the legend of the Horbury Padfoot - a black ghost dog that - IIRC - heralds death.
 * The person who asked about the black dog - did you mean Padfoot or Old Shuck, the black dog of European myth?
 * Sorry if someone else mentioned this and I missed it...But Padfoot is a large blackdog, bigger than the average and can mean death is iminent (but death omens frequently mean change in one's life, not the literal loss of it.)
 * I think there are a number of Padfoot legends. In Horbury - near Wakefield - there's a the legend of the Horbury Padfoot - a black ghost dog that - IIRC - heralds death.
 * I think there are a number of Padfoot legends. In Horbury - near Wakefield - there's a the legend of the Horbury Padfoot - a black ghost dog that - IIRC - heralds death.
 * I think there are a number of Padfoot legends. In Horbury - near Wakefield - there's a the legend of the Horbury Padfoot - a black ghost dog that - IIRC - heralds death.

Proper noun: a black dog

 * The black dog that stalked you was often called Padfoot, and it was also felt that looking him in the eye was a harbinger of doom, probably because you didn't want to find out it was you he'd come to scare the **** out of.
 * In the Quantock Hills of Somerset the black dog was frequently seen and called the 'Gurt Dog'. Cornwall has various tales of the 'Devil's Dandy (or Dando) Dogs', Devon has the 'Yeth (Heath) or Wisht Hounds. Other local names include Barguest, Black Shag, Padfoot or Hooter. Just to be different, in West Yorkshire the common name is 'Guytrash'; in Lancashire this is reduced to 'Trash' or changed to 'Skriker'.
 * There are quite a few similar legends of "Black dogs"; in the East Anglia part of the UK, they were referred to as "Black Shuck". Other names for them are "Padfoot", "Barguest", or "Shrike". They are generally viewed as a portent of death, or approaching evil.
 * The person who asked about the black dog - did you mean Padfoot or Old Shuck, the black dog of European myth?
 * Sorry if someone else mentioned this and I missed it...But Padfoot is a large blackdog, bigger than the average and can mean death is iminent (but death omens frequently mean change in one's life, not the literal loss of it.)
 * I think there are a number of Padfoot legends. In Horbury - near Wakefield - there's a the legend of the Horbury Padfoot - a black ghost dog that - IIRC - heralds death.
 * The person who asked about the black dog - did you mean Padfoot or Old Shuck, the black dog of European myth?
 * Sorry if someone else mentioned this and I missed it...But Padfoot is a large blackdog, bigger than the average and can mean death is iminent (but death omens frequently mean change in one's life, not the literal loss of it.)
 * I think there are a number of Padfoot legends. In Horbury - near Wakefield - there's a the legend of the Horbury Padfoot - a black ghost dog that - IIRC - heralds death.
 * I think there are a number of Padfoot legends. In Horbury - near Wakefield - there's a the legend of the Horbury Padfoot - a black ghost dog that - IIRC - heralds death.
 * I think there are a number of Padfoot legends. In Horbury - near Wakefield - there's a the legend of the Horbury Padfoot - a black ghost dog that - IIRC - heralds death.

Proper noun: an English dog

 * In the Quantock Hills of Somerset the black dog was frequently seen and called the 'Gurt Dog'. Cornwall has various tales of the 'Devil's Dandy (or Dando) Dogs', Devon has the 'Yeth (Heath) or Wisht Hounds. Other local names include Barguest, Black Shag, Padfoot or Hooter. Just to be different, in West Yorkshire the common name is 'Guytrash'; in Lancashire this is reduced to 'Trash' or changed to 'Skriker'.
 * Okay, the mysterious black dogs of England have always been of interest to me (even before I encountered the Hound of the Baskervilles and Padfoot).
 * Okay, the mysterious black dogs of England have always been of interest to me (even before I encountered the Hound of the Baskervilles and Padfoot).
 * Okay, the mysterious black dogs of England have always been of interest to me (even before I encountered the Hound of the Baskervilles and Padfoot).