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great-niece

NOUN
  1. a daughter of your niece or nephew

How To Use great-niece In A Sentence

  • His early career brought him firmly within the English orbit: he was educated at Henry I's court and became earl of Huntingdon in 1113 through his marriage to Matilda, a great-niece of William the Conqueror.
  • However, old man Magus and his great-niece, Ayla, saved my life.
  • According to a great-niece, Frank married twice more, first to a widow who lived near his father's farm.
  • I am going to do whatever it takes to defend the honor of my family, and that includes ensuring that my great-niece marries someone of purity and devotion.
  • Surviving are four nieces and many great-nieces and nephews.
  • Gandhi's pejorative reference to nakedness is ironic considering that, as Mr. Lelyveld details, when he was in his 70s and close to leading India to independence, he encouraged his 17-year-old great-niece, Manu, to be naked during her "nightly cuddles" with him. Among the Hagiographers
  • ‘I don't want to just throw these, ‘Aunt Glad said, and held out to her great-niece the flowers they'd bought on the way.’
  • ‘Aunt Helen was always mischievous,’ her great-niece informed me during an interview.
  • When I asked her how old she was, she knew she was 113 but thought she was young," Mary C. Hollins, Winn's great-niece, said in an Associated Press article. Oldest African American, and one of my church ladies, carried no anger, no stress
  • `I'll tell you what I have, honey," Ella rasped, `I have a great-niece in Altoona P. A. with a spare bedroom. FAIRYLAND
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