Hermione explains that the hourglass is a
Towards the end of Prisoner of Azkaban, Hermione revealed to Harry just how she managed to go to three classes at once. Yes, Ron, Hermione was that good; so good that Professor McGonagall had persuaded the Ministry of Magic to give her a Time-Turner.
Professor McGonagall gave Hermione Granger the Time-Turner at the start of her third year, allowing her to take multiple classes that overlap and would be impossible to attend in real-time.
Gifted to Hermione Granger by Professor McGonagall, the Time Turner is a magical device that allows whomever is wearing it to go back in time.
Bringing A Mirror To Look At The Basilisk
This move saved her life because when the Basilisk caught her, she was only petrified and not killed.
Voldemort had foreseen Harry's intentions, and had planted his snake Nagini in Bathilda's corpse beforehand. As soon as she had Harry alone, Nagini attacked him. Hermione raced to his defence, using a Blasting Curse to repel the snake. The curse ricocheted, damaging Harry's wand.
Hermione sees Harry as only a friend so she has no trouble hugging him. The same is not true of Ron who she has stronger, unacknowledged feelings for. She doesn't want to hug him for fear it will become immediately and plainly obvious to him and even Harry how she feels about Ron.
Near the end of term, she stops fraudulent tabloid reporter and unregistered Animagus, Rita Skeeter, who had published defamatory material about Hermione, Harry, and Hagrid during the Triwizard Tournament, by holding her Animagus form (a beetle) captive in a jar.
Not wanting to get caught in their lie, the boys trudge to the infirmary and find, clasped in Hermione's hand, a piece of paper that, once wrenched out, displays a paragraph of information about the basilisk that fits right in with all of the eerie things that have happened: it lives for hundreds of years, speaks in ...
It's because Hermione was far more mentally prepared for the Horcrux hunt, and its inherent dangers, than her boys were. The Horcrux took advantage of fears and insecurities, of anger and pain, feeding upon them like a leech. Harry and Ron, during this time, were both exceedingly vulnerable.
IIRC, you can only use the time-turner to go back 5 hours or thereabouts. Any more than that could seriously harm whoever is using the time turner. So that's why it was no longer possible to save James and Lily Potter during Harry's time.
Hermione was a prominent example of this as, on the surface, she appeared like someone who would fit right into Ravenclaw. But beyond her interests, her values define her as someone with a take-charge personality and bravery to spare. Unlike Ravenclaws, she didn't apply knowledge in unique ways.
Snape did not know of the time turner, which is very possible, as the less who know about it the better. Fudge may have known, but he is shown as an idiot through the entire series, and he also didn't suspect Harry anyway.
Hermione explains that the hourglass is a Time-Turner; she has been using it all year to get to all her classes. Professor McGonagall instructed her to tell no one about it.
According to The Leaky Cauldron, when a fan asked if Hermione made sure that her parents could remember her again, Rowling said, "she brought them home straight away." This is good news, as it's awful to imagine Hermione's parents never remembering who she is or ever seeing her again.
Mr and Mrs Granger – we're never told their first names – were introduced to the wizarding world in much the same way that most Muggles are: they received a letter from Hogwarts, which revealed their daughter to be a Muggle-born witch. According to Hermione, the news came as a surprise, but her parents were supportive.
Indie-band thinks that when Malfoy realized the havoc the basilisk was wreaking on Hogwarts and its students, he got worried and had to help in the only way he could — by somehow slipping Hermione the ripped piece of paper on basilisks.
Harry and Ron, seeing the troll approaching, lock it into a room, only to discover they have locked it in the girl's bathroom with Hermione. They dash in to rescue Hermione, and the Troll attacks the Trio. Frightened, Ron yells out the first spell that comes to his head, Wingardium Leviosa.
After some searching, Harry and Hermione find the ancient grave of one Ignotus Peverell, marked with the sign Grindelwald used, and the grave where Harry's father and mother are buried.
The Tales of Beedle the Bard first appeared as a fictional book in J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (2007), the seventh and final novel of the Harry Potter series. The book is bequeathed to Hermione Granger by Albus Dumbledore, former headmaster of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
She also chose to make one of the biggest sacrifices in the books: wiping her parents' memories of her and sending them away so they were safe. The one thing Harry always wanted – a family – she selflessly gave up to help him save the world.
Snape always told himself that the problem he had was that he was teaching dunderheads and that it wasn't his bad teaching but the quality of the students that mattered. She lost her virginity to Ron sometime after the Battle of Hogwarts. Not to Krum or McLaggen and surely not Fred. Thank you.
The explanation is very simple - Harry has a very strong sexual desire for Ginny. He has no such feelings for Hermione. Sex is a fundamental aspect of adult relations. Sex is, in fact, the characteristic that defines the difference between a platonic relationship and a romantic one.
In the book, it's primarily because: Hermione didn't disapparate with Harry and Dobby from Malfoy manner. So it's possible she wasn't close by them. Ron apparated with her based on the description of the scene and not knowing Dobby's injury, he probably took her right back to Shell Cottage without thinking.