It is revealed in The Deathly Hallows that Dumbledore was dying anyway and ordered Snape to kill him so that Draco would not have to.
no he didnt not in real life in the goblet of fire voldemort used the hedava kedavra ( kill the spare)spell on him and it killed him
He sorta did, yeah. He felt sorry for him. He had a hard life, that Snape.
why does Brutus want spare ASntony's life?
I do not think so as he wanted to harm Harry Potter all the time and he subtracted a lot of points from harry potter's house and supported Draco Malfoy and Slytherin the most. Plus, he made Neville's life a misery just for fun.
no he does not severus snape kills dumbledore
J.K. Rowling has said that Severus Snape, along with many of her other characters, are loosely based on people she knew in real life, but developed their own distinct characteristics as she developed the character. Professor Snape is loosely based on a professor she had herself.
No. He lost his loyalty the second Lord Voldemort threatened lily potter's life, because of his love for her. Snape was then always loyal to Dumbledore.
Alan thinks that Snape is a strange character because of how you don't quite know how he feels. Snape doesn't like Harry but he does save his life, and doesn't ever reveal too much about his feelings.
no he didnt he didnt have a life
Snape being the Half-Blood Prince has nothing to do with his relationship with Harry. I'm not going to spoil the last movie/book so you'll just have to see how Snape's part in the tale unfolds.
Severus Snape was loyal to Lord Voldemort until 1980 when Lily Evans' life was threatened. He then switched sides and was loyal to Albus Dumbledore until his death in 1998.
Professor Severus Snape is a major character throughout the series. He is the Potions Master at Hogwarts and takes an immediate dislike to Harry due to his likeness to his father, James, who used to bully Snape at school. Despite this, Snape does try to protect Harry and saves his life from Professor Quirrell when he tries to curse him off his broomstick.