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- Dictionarymanor/ˈmanə/
noun
- 1. a large country house with lands: "a Tudor manor house in the English countryside"
- 2. the district covered by a police station: informal British "they were the undisputed rulers of their manor"
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The meaning of MANOR is the house or hall of an estate : mansion. How to use manor in a sentence.
MANOR definition: 1. a large old house in the country with land belonging to it, especially in Europe 2. the area in…. Learn more.
Manor definition: (in England) a landed estate or territorial unit, originally of the nature of a feudal lordship, consisting of a lord's demesne and of lands within which he has the right to exercise certain privileges, exact certain fees, etc.. See examples of MANOR used in a sentence.
Definition of manor noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
a landed estate or territorial unit, originally of the nature of a feudal lordship, consisting of a lord's demesne and of lands within which he has the right to exercise certain privileges, exact certain fees, etc. 2. any similar territorial unit in medieval Europe, as a feudal estate. 3.
A manor is the house of a lord — pretty fancy stuff. If you like to read 18th-century British novels, you probably read about a lot of people having dinner, dance, and restrained romance in their manors.
n. 1. a feudal estate, consisting of a lord's house and adjoining lands over which he exercises control. 2. (in England) the house of a lord with the land belonging to it; a landed estate. 3. the main house or mansion on an estate, plantation, etc.