greatgreatgreatgranddaughter

English

Noun

greatgreatgreatgranddaughter (plural greatgreatgreatgranddaughters)

  1. Alternative form of great-great-great-granddaughter.
    • 1975, James A. Carroll, Larry Milberry, “The print shop”, in Canadian Communities (Ginn World Studies), [Toronto, Ont.?]: Ginn and Company, →OCLC, page 15:
      In 1973 when Princess Anne—Queen Victoria’s greatgreatgreatgranddaughter—was married people all over the world watched the ceremony on television.
    • 1985 July, Alice Milford Gruber, compiler, Milfords, Kinsmen and Countrymen: A Supplement to The Milford Connections, Akron, Oh., →OCLC, page 36:
      These children are the greatgreatgreatgranddaughters of Sarah!
    • 1998, Annelies Glander, “A handbook of inheritance used in Sana’a”, in Inheritance in Islam: Women’s Inheritance in Sana’a (Republic of Yemen): Law, Religion, and Reality (European University Studies; series XXVII, Asian and African Studies; 69), Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, →ISBN, part 1, [], page 63:
      A man dies, leaving a daughter, a granddaughter by his son, a greatgranddaughter by his son, a greatgreatgranddaughter by his son, a greatgreatgreatgranddaughter by his son, and a daughter and a son who are children of his greatgreatgreatgreatgrandson, and a granddaughter equivalent in degree but from a different father: []
    • 2001, Amanda Aizpuriete, translated by Ieva Lešinska, compiled by Kristīne Sadovska, All Birds Know This: Selected Contemporary Latvian Poetry, Riga: Tapals, →ISBN, page 16:
      I resemble my greatgreatgreatgranddaughter. Just like her, I like to wear black dresses, watch old movies, and walk barefoot – on those few roads where it is still possible. [] I am an old and smoky mirror into which my greatgreatgreatgranddaughter looked for a very long time this morning.