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.
After spending a hefty portion of Half-Blood Prince realising he actually liked Ron's little sister (and after Ginny spent the majority of her early years fancying Harry and blushing furiously whenever he was in the room), the pair finally did get together, and Harry finally had an ounce of happiness after so many dark ...
Actually, to use todays terms, they ghosted each other after the date. Harry left Cho because Cho was always crying along with the fact that she thought Harry was also seeing Hermione. This happened in Harry Potter and the order of the Phoenix.
In an interview at Leaky Cauldron in 2005, Rowling revealed that she intended for these two character to end up together, because Harry needed someone "who can stand the demands of being with Harry Potter".
Tom Riddle took Ginny in order to lure Harry into the Chamber so that he could kill him. He specifically says at one point that " killing mudbloods doesn't interest [him] anymore" and that getting Harry has been his real purpose for a while.
The Heir of Slytherin turns out to be Ginny Weasley, who is being controlled via a magical diary that once belonged to Tom Riddle, AKA Voldemort.
He poured the piece of his soul that resided in the Horcrux diary inside of Ginny and fed secrets to her that only that piece of Voldemort's soul would know. The more Ginny used the diary the stronger Tom became, using her fears and secrets as nourishment, if you will.
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.
J.K. Rowling Says Hermione Should Have Ended Up With Harry Potter, Not Ron. Well, everything you thought you knew about love is a lie. Turns out J.K. Rowling thinks she made a huge mistake by pairing Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley in the Harry Potter novels.
“I wrote the Hermione/Ron relationship as a form of wish fulfillment. That's how it was conceived, really,” Rowling says in the interview. “For reasons that have very little to do with literature and far more to do with me clinging to the plot as I first imagined it, Hermione ended up with Ron.”
During his sixth year, Harry discovers that he finds Ginny to be a source of constant hilarity. When he is sixteen, Harry develops feelings for Ginny, but it is not her physical attributes that he spends the bulk of his time thinking about; rather, it is her humour.
“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.
Harry's crush on Ginny and their subsequent relationship in the last two (but particularly the sixth) book led to some of my all time favorite moments in the whole series.
There was no relationship between Fred and Hermione. Both of them were just merely friends who has spent time together.
Ron first began showing signs of romantic interest in Hermione in their second year; he was irritated by her crush on Professor Gilderoy Lockhart, became so angry that Draco Malfoy called her a "Mudblood" that he tried to hex him, and was even more upset than Harry when she became one of the victims of the basilisk.
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. While Daniel thought it would be soft and sensual, read on to know how Emma finally kissed him and why.
And this is why Hermione does not fit into Ravenclaw, since she lacks their creativity of thought. When you also add in her fearlessness and her strong convictions about right and wrong, which are inherently Gryffindor traits, then there was even less of a chance she'd end up wearing blue and bronze.
Did Hermione and Krum break up? No, because they were never really together. Hermione agreed to be Krum's partner at the Yule Ball, but that kind of social contract does not imply any understanding that they were in a romantic relationship.
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.
Ron never apologized openly by saying “sorry". Since the books are Harry's pov, we don't have many apology moments in the books. Even in Gof, when Ron hurt her, it is not outright stated that he apologized. They were simply being civil to each other the next day.
However, Tom was in love with a Muggle woman named Cecilia and did not noticing Merope or her affections towards him. Determined to have Tom for herself, Merope was said to have given Tom a love potion to make him fall in love with her.
Dumbledore is quick to point out that Voldemort has killed his own father to avenge his abandonment of Voldemort's pregnant mother. Voldemort does not stop to consider the fact that Merope had placed Tom Riddle under a love spell and forced him into a union he never would have considered otherwise.
Because Riddle did not have a corporeal form in the Chamber of Secrets, he did not have the power that an Unforgivable requires. The wandwork he does with Harry's wand is small stuff compared to killing someone.