The Collaborative International Dictionary
Great-granddaughter \Great"-grand"daugh`ter\, n. [See Great, 10.] A daughter of one's grandson or granddaughter.
Wiktionary
n. The daughter of someone's grandchild.
Usage examples of "great-granddaughter".
Dagro Blackhail had liked him well enough to invite him to hear vows at both his weddings, and when Spynie's first great-granddaughter had been born five years back, Spynie had sent Dagro ten head of blackneck sheep in celebration.
So it could have been Esther's husband Kasei, in which case Diana was Jackie's niece, and John and Hiroko's great-granddaughter-or else it could have been Peter, as many supposed, in which case she was Jackie's half-niece, and Ann and Simon's great-granddaughter.
So it could have been Esther’s husband Kasei, in which case Diana was Jackie’s niece, and John and Hiroko’s great-granddaughter—or else it could have been Peter, as many supposed, in which case she was Jackie’s half-niece, and Ann and Simon’s great-granddaughter.
I guess I just get a little annoyed because Fred and Sam and I are having a hard time making this time warping thing work when even our own great-granddaughters, who are girls, and a hundred years younger than us, can figure it out and- I'm screaming again.
Aureliano would talk to him in the tortured Papiamento that he had learned in a few weeks and sometimes he would share his chicken-head soup, prepared by the great-granddaughter, with him.
Alice Truman, on the other hand, was the daughter of a vice admiral, the granddaughter of a captain and a rear admiral, and the great-granddaughter of a commodore, two rear admirals, and a first space lord.
In her small, ugly clapboard shack up the Nuuanu, Hong Kong's grandmother, then ninety-six years old, listened appalled as one of her great-granddaughters read aloud the account of Hong Kong's oratory.