
Biography
Lisa is 8 years old (despite the fact that there have been 3 separate episodes which focused on her 8th birthday), two years younger than her brother Bart. Lisa's mother Marge insisted on choosing her name because her father Homer wanted to call her "Bartzina".
Future
Eight years from "now": Depicted in "Future-Drama". Professor Frink shows that she is to take Milhouse to her prom after he saved her from a housefire, which she later learned he started. She almost loses her chance to attend an Ivy League college on scholarship, which prompts Bart (in that time) to use Frink's machine to see what Lisa's life will be if she does not attend university. It is revealed that she would be unhappily married to Milhouse, which spurs Bart to save her from this fate.
Fifteen years from "now": Depicted in "Lisa's Wedding". A fortune teller in a medieval carnival reveals that Lisa will fall in love with a British man who matches her intellectually, but her wedding will be cancelled because of his intense dislike for her family. It is also stated that Lisa will lose her virginity to Milhouse (although, in Marge's words, "Milhouse doesn't count!").
Thirty years from "now": Depicted in "Bart to the Future". An American Indian reveals that Lisa will become the "first straight female US President", having defeated Chastity Bono. A balding middle-aged Milhouse works as a Cabinet Secretary for the Lisa Simpson Administration. Her administration's main issue is the massive foreign debt. She appoints Bart as the "Secretary of Keeping it Real" as a way to keep him out of the way at Camp David, but he later buys her some time to sort out the debt problem.
In "Lisa the Greek", Lisa pictures herself as a future gambling addict.
In "Bart Gets Famous" Lisa imagines she has done heroic things like curing all disease while Bart just cleans her trophies.
As seen in "Future-Drama", Lisa is married to Milhouse and wants to join a poetry class at the local community college. Note, though, that this is an "Alternate-Reality" scene, and it is hinted that it is not true.
In "Lisa the Simpson", Lisa imagines herself very overweight, with children, and married to Ralph. This is also a fantasy scene.

Fifteen years from "now": Depicted in "Lisa's Wedding". A fortune teller in a medieval carnival reveals that Lisa will fall in love with a British man who matches her intellectually, but her wedding will be cancelled because of his intense dislike for her family. It is also stated that Lisa will lose her virginity to Milhouse (although, in Marge's words, "Milhouse doesn't count!").
Thirty years from "now": Depicted in "Bart to the Future". An American Indian reveals that Lisa will become the "first straight female US President", having defeated Chastity Bono. A balding middle-aged Milhouse works as a Cabinet Secretary for the Lisa Simpson Administration. Her administration's main issue is the massive foreign debt. She appoints Bart as the "Secretary of Keeping it Real" as a way to keep him out of the way at Camp David, but he later buys her some time to sort out the debt problem.
In "Lisa the Greek", Lisa pictures herself as a future gambling addict.
In "Bart Gets Famous" Lisa imagines she has done heroic things like curing all disease while Bart just cleans her trophies.
As seen in "Future-Drama", Lisa is married to Milhouse and wants to join a poetry class at the local community college. Note, though, that this is an "Alternate-Reality" scene, and it is hinted that it is not true.
In "Lisa the Simpson", Lisa imagines herself very overweight, with children, and married to Ralph. This is also a fantasy scene.
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