1 Severus Snape Severus Snape is a fictional character in J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series. He is characterised as a person of great complexity, whose coldly sarcastic and controlled exterior conceals deep emotions and anguish.
She is the love interest of Ron Weasley. Hermione is a student at Hogwarts and is friends with Harry and Ron. Although it is never outright said, it seems that Hermione and Ron had crushes on each other throughout the entire series. However, at first, neither of them would admit their feelings for the other.
Yet at sixteen, Harry picked Ginny Weasley to be his romantic partner. Why was Ginny "the One?" The explanation is very simple - Harry has a very strong sexual desire for Ginny. He has no such feelings for Hermione.
Snape dismissed the curse as bearing no change to her appearance, causing Hermione to flee in tears. We knew Snape wasn't exactly chummy, but this was a real tipping point.
Without a doubt, Dolores Umbridge is the most hated character in the Harry Potter universe.
Lazy: Horace Slughorn
Horace Slughorn is actually a fascinating example of a Slytherin, because he did have a lot of ambition but he was also an astonishingly lazy person.
Hermione Granger
Arguably the most famous female character in Harry Potter, Hermione was a dedicated student who always strived to be the best no matter what it took.
Hermione is a Muggle-born Gryffindor, who becomes best friends with Harry Potter and Ron Weasley. Rowling states that she was born on 19 September 1979 and she was nearly twelve when she first attended Hogwarts.
Oddly enough, it's the boy wizard himself. She caused a scandal when she killed him off at the end of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, but Albus Dumbledore is still the character JK Rowling would most like to have dinner with, the bestselling children's author has revealed.
“Harry was constantly crushing on Draco. He just couldn't hide it.” In the books and movies, Harry and Draco are constantly at each other's throats, given that Draco's parents are Voldemort supporters and the evil wizard killed Harry's parents.
Katie Leung, the actress who played Cho Chang in the Harry Potter movies, became the envy of teenage girls everywhere when she gave Harry his first kiss in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. The kiss played on the big screen in 2007, almost 10 years ago.
Although there are strengths to every house, Hufflepuff house in particular often comes up short. While the other houses seem cool and invite a certain allure, Hufflepuff is a little different. Often considered the least desirable of all the sorting options, here are some reasons why Hufflepuff house is the worst.
Lord Voldemort
Tom Marvolo Riddle started both Wizarding Wars, created the Death Eaters and killed Harry Potter's parents. We could go on – he was the most dangerous Dark wizard of all time – but we won't. His horrific achievements are well known.
So Snape was cruel, biased towards his house, and downright rude to his students: this we can't deny. Calling poor Hermione an 'insufferable know-it-all', for example, was pretty terrible.
But Snape didn't have time to get too deeply into that. Later in the year, Dumbledore revealed that Harry was in fact a Horcrux, meaning that he would eventually have to die. Now, as firmly established, Snape was not the greatest fan of Harry, but that didn't mean that he ever stopped loving Lily.
Some might argue that Snape did it to play the part of a merciless teacher and pretended to hate Harry for having killed Voldemort, so he would not come under suspicion of being allied with Dumbledore. But it's pretty clear that he treated Harry like dirt to get revenge on James.
Harry and his friends are just beginning to experience the complications that inevitably go along with new romantic relationships. Ron is extraordinarily upset to learn that Hermione has kissed Victor Krum and uses his anger as a mask for his true feelings toward his best friend.
Well, in case it skipped your mind, Harry and Hermione shared a kiss – not cause they were in love or dating each other but a manifestation of a Horcrux, in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1.
The hugely successful author tells Wonderland magazine she chose the red-haired Ron for Hermione for very personal reasons having little to do with literature. She told the magazine she “wrote the Hermione/Ron relationship as a form of wish fulfilment” and said the couple might eventually need relationship counselling.