Citations:great-granddaughter

Singular, hyphenated

 * 1890, David Nasmith, Outline of Roman History from Romulus to Justinian, page 289:
 * Though, by the Twelve Tables, the daughter of the patron, his granddaughter by his son, and his great-granddaughter by the grandson of his son, have the same right as the patron, yet the praetor only calls the male issue of the patron to the succession.
 * 1997, Martha Hodes, White Women, Black Men: Illicit Sex in the Nineteenth-Century South, page 35:
 * The master of Nell's newly freed great-granddaughter appealed, but freedom was affirmed.
 * 2011, Philip Eade, Prince Philip, page 43:
 * She was the great-granddaughter of Napoleon's renegade younger brother Lucien, although her great wealth came from her maternal grandfather, François Blanc, who had accumulated a vast fortune from property in Monaco and as owner of the casinos at Monte Carlo and Homburg.

Singular, non-hyphenated

 * 1826, David Hume, The Life of David Hume, page 108:
 * The reputation of Tronchin had brought to Geneva the duchess d'Enville, the great granddaughter of the author of the "Maxims."
 * 1997, Miguel Encinias, Two Lives for Oñate, page 1:
 * She was equally rich and as aristocratic as one could be, for she was the great granddaughter of the magnificent, but ill-fated, emperor of the Aztecs, Moctezuma II, and the granddaughter of the great Cortes, his conqueror.
 * 2011, A. S. Rose, Life and Poetic Emotions, page 88:
 * But what it turned out to be was a great blessing to me than and now it is still a blessing to me that I gave birth to you who has given me my special memories of you when you were a child and also now that because of you I have a grandson Jonathan and a granddaughter Amanda with a great granddaughter Emma.

Plural, hyphenated

 * 1984, Madeleine L'Engle, The Summer of the Great-Grandmother, page 8:
 * The summer of the great-grandmother began several weeks before her arrival, early in June, while she was still in the South, and her great-granddaughters were still living in England, where their parents, Alan and Josephine, were preparing to break up their home in Lincoln and return to New York.

Plural, non-hyphenated

 * 1882, T. Lambert Mears, translator, The Institutes of Gaius and Justinian, the Twelve Tables, and the CXVIIIth Novels, page 413:
 * And, since it is held that grandsons and granddaughters, as well as great grandsons and great granddaughters, are to succeed in the place of their ascendants, it seemed to follow that inheritances should be divided, not according to individuals, but according to representation; so that the son takes one-half of the inheritance and the two or more grandsons by the other son the other half.

Multiple "greats"

 * Two "greats".


 * 1878, John Dawson Mayne, A Treatise on Hindu Law and Usage, page 424:
 * But the offerings made by the son of his great-great-granddaughter do not reach as far as the owner, and therefore he is not a bandhu.
 * 1999, Carol M. Butzow, John W. Butzow, Exploring the Environment Through Children's Literature, page 25:
 * One day, the great-great-granddaughter of the man who built the Little House found the house and had her moved to a spot in the country.
 * 2007, Carolly Erickson, Great Harry, page 33:
 * The countess was a great-great-granddaughter of Edward III; by an intricate genealogical calculation this made her son the leading male claimant to the English throne in the Lancastrian line.


 * Three "greats".


 * 1997, Peter Houston, Ted Franklin Belue, A Sketch of the Life and Character of Daniel Boone: A Memoir, page ix:
 * Foremost is Mrs. Gladys Santen, of Paris, Kentucky, the great-great-great-granddaughter of Peter Houston.


 * Four "greats".
 * 2005, Alida C. Metcalf, Family and Frontier in Colonial Brazil: Santana de Parnaíba, 1580-1822, page 118:
 * At the end of the eighteenth century, Parnaiba's captain major, Antonio Correa de Lemos Leite, who had come from Sao Paulo to marry the great-great-great-great-granddaughter of the founders of Parnaiba, died.


 * Five "greats".


 * 2004, Karen Richardson, Steven Green, T Dot Griots: An Anthology Of Toronto's Black Storytellers, page 75:
 * He saw his great great great great great granddaughter Desdemona Sitting under a Maple Leaf tree Looking up towards the sun Which made the leaves look like tinsel As they glittered and reflected the light That gave them life


 * Six "greats".


 * 2007, David Steinberg, Book of David, page 89:
 * Sadly, there were days Shem staggered home so dog-tired from the work of seeding women, some of them young enough to be his great-great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter (indeed, some of them were his great-great-great-great-great-great-granddaughters), that he cried out, “Oh, Lordy, give this bent and withered schvantz a breather.”


 * Seven "greats".
 * 1994, Nichelle Nichols, Beyond Uhura: Star Trek and Other Memories, page 144:
 * Many times through the years I've referred to Uhura as my great-great-great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter of the twentythird century.


 * Eight "greats".


 * 1996, Peter DePietro, Death and Deceit on the Nile, page 41:
 * She is the great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great granddaughter of King Pharclas.


 * Nine "greats".


 * 2002, Kay Meier, Rehearsal, page 97:
 * Kay is the great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great granddaughter of Anne Hutchinson.
 * 2003, Jane Stevenson, The Empress of the Last Days, page 246:
 * I'm sending you this email from Barbados, where I've fallen in love with Pelagius's great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter.


 * Ten "greats".
 * 2008, Richard Brookhiser, "American History:Jamestown at 400", Encyclopædia Britannica Almanac 2008, page 595:
 * In May 2007, Jamestown celebrated its 400th birthday, and Queen Elizabeth II, King James I's great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter, was present to observe the occasion.