- OPHELIA
- She's warned to not fall in love with Hamlet
- Hamlet character
- Daughter of Polonius
- There's rosemary, that's for remembrance speaker
- Hamlet's love
- Early role for Kate Winslet and Helena Bonham Carter
- Shakespeare character who drowns
- Lover of Hamlet
- Mad maiden of "Hamlet"
- Laertes' sister
- Character to whom "Get thee to a nunnery" is said
- O woe is me / To have seen what I have seen, see what I see! speaker, in Shakespeare
- Laertes's sister, in "Hamlet"
- Hamlet flower carrier
- To whom "Get thee to a nunnery" was said
- Sister of Laertes
- Her drowning is reported in Act IV
- Hamlet woman at whose grave Gertrude says "Sweets to the sweet"
- The "thee" in "Get thee to a nunnery"
- Hamlet character who drowns
- Shakespearean heroine
- Hamlet's girlfriend
- Hamlet's beloved
- Polonius' daughter
- Shakespeare's "primrose path" speaker
- Character associated with 30 Across
- Heroine of classic tragedy.
- Sister to Laertes.
- Hamlet killed her father.
- Shakespearean role.
- She loved Hamlet.
- Character in "Hamlet."
- A victim of Hamlet.
- Maiden in 1602 drama.
- Hamlet role.
- Role in "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
- Tragic heroine
- Polonius's daughter
- Good night, sweet ladies. Good night, good night speaker
- Tragic figure in "Hamlet"
- Rich gifts wax poor when givers prove unkind speaker
- O, what a noble mind is here o'erthrown! speaker, in Shakespeare
- Shakespeare character who goes insane
- To whom Hamlet says "Get thee to a nunnery"
- She "speaks things in doubt, / That carry but half sense"
- Shakespeare character who coins the term "primrose path"
- Shakespeare character who says "Good night, ladies; good night, sweet ladies; good night, good night"
- Who says "O, what a noble mind is here o'erthrown!," in Shakespeare
- Shakespeare character who introduced the phrase "primrose path"
- Daughter of Polonius, in Shakespeare
- Daughter of Polonius in 'Hamlet'
- Daughter in 'Hamlet'
- Jean Simmons role in "Hamlet"
- Hamlet victim
- Laertes' sister in "Hamlet"
- Hamlet noblewoman
- Hamlet's lost love
- Hamlet's love interest
- Shakespearean character in a Millais painting
- Hamlet's "get thee to a nunnery" target
- Sister of Laertes, in "Hamlet"
- Gertrude reported her "drown'd, drown'd"
- 0 what a noble mind is here o'erthrown! sayer
- O, woe is me to have seen what I have seen speaker
- She's the "thee" in "Get thee to a nunnery"