Citations:Dramione

Noun: "(fandom slang) the ship of characters Draco Malfoy and Hermione Granger from the Harry Potter series"

 * 2011, Brittany Dalton, "Away with the Niceties", The Vista (University of Central Oklahoma), 1 September 2011, page 3:
 * "I secretly ship Dramione!" one boldly asserts, while more serious blogs boast confessions along the lines of, "I moved away to college this year and haven't made any new friends."
 * 2011, Sayantan Deb & Angela Song, "Potter Legacy", The Harvard Independent, Volume 42, Number 25, 15 September 2011, page 10:
 * This is a haven for writers and readers to converge and show their interest in a variety of genres with any characters, from the typical Dramione (Draco and Hermione) action-adventure to the absurd Filch-Peeves BDSM.
 * 2012, Christine Zhao, "Scene and Heard", The Heights (Boston College), Volume 93, Number 21, 19 April 2012, page B2:
 * Unfortunately, J.K. Rowling’s latest novel will not be a collection of awesome HP fan fiction pairings (Dramione, anyone? Maybe some Harry/Snape?) come to life.
 * 2012, Krixia Subingsubing, "Date A Girl Who Writes", The Sword (St. Paul College of Makati), Volume 18, Number 1, June 2012-January 2013, page 14:
 * Ask her about her favorite ships. Does she like Dramione, or Romione? Ask her why, and if she's written fanfics about them.
 * 2013, Anne Jamison, Fic: Why Fanfiction Is Taking Over the World, BenBella Books (2013), ISBN 9781939529190, unnumbered page:
 * Dramione shippers apparently feel the same way when too much attention is paid to Drarry.
 * 2019, Beatriz Brito do Nascimento, "No heteros in this heterotopia: Harry Potter slash fanfiction as heterotopian space", dissertation submitted to the University of Porto, page 120:
 * Therefore, it is logical that the selected trope will more often be used in fics which have a non-normative ship: fandomstats relays that, within the EWE tag, some of the most prolific ships include Drarry, Dramione (Draco/Hermione, not a slash ship but still one that does not conform with Rowling’s normative ideas as it contains Draco, an antagonistic character), and ships involving Snape, including Snamione and Snarry.