prisoner of war | The Prisoner | The Prisoner of Zenda | Prisoner (TV series) | Prisoner | Prisoner of war | The Prisoner of Second Avenue | prisoner-of-war camp | Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse | The Prisoner of Zhamanak | Prisoner-of-war camp | prisoner | José Padilla (prisoner) | Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office | The Prisoner of Chillon | Holzminden prisoner-of-war camp | Bagram torture and prisoner abuse | The Spanish Prisoner | The Prisoner's Dilemma | The Prisoner of Zenda (1937 film) | ''The Prisoner of Zenda | The Prisoner Of Chillon | The Prisoner in other media | Squadron Leader McNamara (left) as Executive Officer of No. 77 Squadron, talking with Flight Lieutenant John "Butch" Hannan following the latter's release from a North Korean Prisoner of war | Skorpa prisoner of war camp | Prisoner's Hope | Prisoner's Dilemma | prisoner's dilemma | Prisoner of War | Prisoner of the Mountains |
Author J.K. Rowling used the word in the third installment of her Harry Potter novel, The Prisoner of Azkaban leading to a growing use of the otherwise seldom heard term.
In the third book in the Harry Potter series, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, a mysterious Gytrash-like large black dog appears to Harry several times while he is alone in dark places (here referred to as a Grim, an omen of death).