If you are referring to the Philosoher's stone, it was never really stated. Dumbledore made it so that anyone who wanted to find the stone, but not use it, would be the only ones able to attain it.
There is no such thing in the Harry Potter series.In the first book we learn about the philosopher's (sorcerer's) stone which produces the Elixir of Life and makes the drinker immortal.In the seventh book Harry finds out about the three hallows one of which is the resurrection stone that can let you see your deceased loved ones.
I'm not 100% sure about this and tell me if I'm wrong but i think Ignots's present in Harry Potter was the invisibiltity cloak. The invisibility cloak was on eof the three deathly hallows along with the elder wand and the resurrection stone. I hope that is of some use!
No, the snitch carries the resurrection stone inside it.The resurrection stone is one of the three Deathly Hallows and was found hidden inside Marvolo Gaunt's ring - one of Lord Voldemort's Horcruxes which Albus Dumbledore destroyed in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince using the sword of Gryffindor.Albus Dumbledore found the resurrection stone and attempted to use it so he could see his dead relatives, especially his sister as he wanted to know if he was the one who killed her. However, the ring was still a Horcrux when he put it on and it cursed his hand - a curse that should have killed him. Dumbledore then put the ring in the first snitch Harry Potter ever caught (the one he almost swallowed) and charmed it so it would "open at the close" - when Harry was about to die which allowed him to see his parents, Sirius Black and Remus Lupin one last time.
Harry Potter uses the invisibility cloak in all of the Harry Potter books. The cloak is first used in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, chapter 12: The Mirror of Erised. Each edition of the book has different pages numbers so it wouldn't be possible to create an accurate list of every time the cloak is used.
Answer: No such thing. He left a snitch to Harry, with the Resurrection Stone in it. Answer: The Pensieve. (Although Dumbledore never gave/left a Pensieve to Harry).
If you are referring to the Philosoher's stone, it was never really stated. Dumbledore made it so that anyone who wanted to find the stone, but not use it, would be the only ones able to attain it.
There is no such thing in the Harry Potter series.In the first book we learn about the philosopher's (sorcerer's) stone which produces the Elixir of Life and makes the drinker immortal.In the seventh book Harry finds out about the three hallows one of which is the resurrection stone that can let you see your deceased loved ones.
I'm not 100% sure about this and tell me if I'm wrong but i think Ignots's present in Harry Potter was the invisibiltity cloak. The invisibility cloak was on eof the three deathly hallows along with the elder wand and the resurrection stone. I hope that is of some use!
'Bringing back the dead', albeit on a purely audio/visual level (no touch), is the general function of the stone, though there doesn't need to really be any specific kind of motivation to use it beyond the desire to interact with a particular person (or more). In Harry's case, the stone served the purpose of allowing Harry to see and interact with his dead loved ones in order to steel himself into confronting Voldemort.
Harry only used the Resurrection Stone once, as he was heading into the forest to die by Voldemort's hand. He used the stone to bring back his mother, father, godfather, and Lupin. They helped to make accepting death easier for him. When he met Voldemort in the forest, he dropped the stone and they vanished. Later, after Voldemort's death (in the book anyway), he went to the headmaster's office and told Dumbledore that he didn't plan on looking for the stone again. It's possible he was remembering his former headmaster's words from the first book: "It does not do to dwell on dreams, and forget to live." After all, the Resurrection Stone doesn't bring people back to life; only a state in between life and death, visible only to the one who brought them back. In answer to your question, Harry did bring back Lupin. He didn't bring back the others because they didn't have ties of such significance to him.
No, the stone was actually in the Mirror of Erised. He had to want the stone, but not want to use it to get it out.
For a short time he did, but then he threw the Rsurrection Stone away in the Forbidden Forest. He kept his Invisibility Cloak and he kept the Elder Wand safe, but did not used it. He continued to use his holly and phoenix feather wand after he repaired it using the Elder Wand.
Mischief Managed.
No, the snitch carries the resurrection stone inside it.The resurrection stone is one of the three Deathly Hallows and was found hidden inside Marvolo Gaunt's ring - one of Lord Voldemort's Horcruxes which Albus Dumbledore destroyed in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince using the sword of Gryffindor.Albus Dumbledore found the resurrection stone and attempted to use it so he could see his dead relatives, especially his sister as he wanted to know if he was the one who killed her. However, the ring was still a Horcrux when he put it on and it cursed his hand - a curse that should have killed him. Dumbledore then put the ring in the first snitch Harry Potter ever caught (the one he almost swallowed) and charmed it so it would "open at the close" - when Harry was about to die which allowed him to see his parents, Sirius Black and Remus Lupin one last time.
Harry Potter uses the invisibility cloak in all of the Harry Potter books. The cloak is first used in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, chapter 12: The Mirror of Erised. Each edition of the book has different pages numbers so it wouldn't be possible to create an accurate list of every time the cloak is used.
You could only get the philosopher's stone out of the mirror if you wanted the stone, but didn't want to use it. Professor Quirrell wanted to use the stone to restore Lord Voldemort to power. Harry wanted it to prevent that from happening, but had no intention of using the stone for himself. Therefore the mirror presented it to him.