Harry has spoken.

Actor Daniel Radcliffe has weighed on the controversy that sprang up as soon as J.K. Rowling revealed that the term "Muggle" — the word for non-magical human beings in the Harry Potter books and film series — is not used among American witches and wizards.

Instead, magically-inclined Americans will call the magic-free folk "No-Maj" (short for "no magic" and pronounced "no-madge") in Fantastic Beats and Where to Find Them, a Rowling-scripted Potter prequel starring Eddie Redmayne, Katherine Waterston and Colin Farrell. The film is set in the same magical word as Harry Potter, but take place in New York City decades before Harry's birth.

So what says Harry himself?

"I have no strong opinions about this," Radcliffe told Mashable when asked about the no-maj news. "We have different words in England, so it makes perfect sense that there should be a different word for it in America."

Radcliffe, who is currently in New York City promoting his new film Victor Frankenstein alongside James McAvoy, added that "because no one has pronounced it on film yet, no one [really] knows how to say it."

"I guess part of the new prequel is set here, or they come here, so I'm excited to see what they do with that," he added.

McAvoy, who chimed in on the interview, was shocked to hear that Radcliffe didn't have a stronger opinion on the news, which ignited fan outcry on the Internet.

Daniel Radcliffe and James McAvoy (right) promote the upcoming film "Victor Frankenstein" Image: Mashable, Noah Throop

"You have no strong feelings about this? It doesn't keep you up at night? I'm outraged!" McAvoy said. "I'd be more excited to see what wizards from America and wizards from the U.K. [fight about], like coriander versus cilantro."

Radcliffe's rebuttal: "That's a lot of the prequel actually," he joked. "It starts with 10 pages of that."

For more on Fantastic Beasts, check out this plot summary, courtesy of Entertainment Weekly:

"Eccentric magizoologist Newt Scamander (Oscar winner Eddie Redmayne) comes to New York (for a reason we won’t disclose) with his trusty weathered case. This case is one of those way-way-way-bigger-on-the-inside magical devices, and within are expansive habitats for a collection of rare and endangered magical creatures from Newt’s travels around globe. He discovers the American wizarding community is fearfully hiding from Muggles (who are called “No-Maj” in the States ... ) and the threat of public exposure is an even graver concern than in the UK (remember the Salem witch trials?). Fantastic Beasts is the story of what happens when this uniquely skilled English wizard travels to wiz-phobic America and a variety of his creatures, some quite dangerous … get out of their case."

The film is scheduled to hit theaters in 2016.