Name: Ginevra (ginny) Molly Weasley
Sex: female
Age: 16
(School)
Year: 5th
House: Gryffindor like the rest of my family.
Best Subject: Charms
Worst Subject: Potions or COMC
(General)
Blood: Pure (not that it matters )
Height: small
Build: slim well proportioned (skinny)
Ethnic group: White, British/English
Cloths: Gryffindor Uniform or a top with jeans or a skirt
Personality: Fun,sporty,energetic,stubourn,headstrong.
Crush: two
Dating: no one.
(School)
Pets: a Pgymy puff called Arnold,so cute!
(General)
Wand:
Home: The burrow with my parents and brothers
DOB: August 11 1990
(Adults)
Married: no
Separated: no
In Love: yes
Children: none
Brother/Sisters/Cousins: 6 big brothers
(All)
Mother: Molly (Prewett ) Weasley.
Father: Arthur Weasley.
Character History:
Ginny is described in the series as being small in stature, having long red hair and bright brown eyes, which, Harry notes in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, are exactly the same colour as her mother's Later, she is described by several characters (including her brother Ron and the Slytherin Pansy Parkinson) as quite pretty and too popular for her own good. Rowling has described her in interviews as "a fairly forceful personality" who is "tough, not in an unpleasant way, but... gutsy". She also characterised Ginny as "funny" and "very warm and compassionate". As Ginny's character emerges, readers see evidence that she is extremely assertive and has a fierce temper and can be unkind when angered but also that she is thoughtful and comforting when her sympathies are aroused. She is also one of the few characters who can say Lord Voldemort's name without fear.
Ginny is the youngest of the seven Weasley children and the only daughter, "the first girl to be born into the Weasley clan for several generations". her birthday as 11 August, 1981. The Weasley family is portrayed as financially struggling but pure-blood, meaning that almost all Ginny's relatives in recent generations have possessed magical ability. Rowling establishes blood purity as a concept that some characters in Harry Potter value as being akin to nobility, but the Weasleys discount this notion, believing blood purity to be unimportant. This, along with their poverty, leads some other pure-blood families to disdain and even openly insult them.