Crookshanks was Hermione Granger's pet cat. He is half-Kneazle,[1]as evidenced by his lion-like appearance, ability to solve problems on his own without aid or teaching, and clear dislike of and ability at recognising untrustworthy persons (even if they are transfigured).
Chat with our AI personalities
Hermione Granger's cat was not totally a cat. It was half a cat and half a magical creature called a Kneazle. His name was Crookshanks.
Hermione purchases Crookshanks, already named before she bought him, from the Magical Menagerie in Diagon Alley in 1993, the Golden Trio's third year. She had went into the shop at first to purchase an owl, but ended up with Crookshanks after the saleslady said nobody wanted him.
Crookshanks is highly intelligent, an effect of being half-Kneazle, which is why Hermione and him are the perfect pair. He ends up being very important to the storyline of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, as he obtains Neville Longbottom's list of all of the Gryffindor's passwords to their common room for Sirius Black, and he helps the trio in getting into the secret tunnel at the base of the Whomping Willow by pressing a knot at the willow's base. "hermions" is not a character in Harry Potter
If you are referring to the Hermione of Harry Potter fame, that cat is called Crookshanks.
There is no janitor in Harry Potter at any time.
No, in the 7-book series, Harry never got drunk and talked to a cat.
Yes, in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Askaban, J.K Rowling introduces Crookshanks, Hermione's ginger cat, into the series.
Crookshanks (Hermione Granger's cat from the Harry Potter series), featured mainly in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, is a male. If you read Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Hermione always refers to Crookshanks as 'he'.
Professor McGonagall is the transfiguration professor at Hogwarts and can turn into a cat. She doesn't follow Harry around though, the cat that does that is Filch the caretakers cat Mrs Norris, who is not a transfigured human.