From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishgrangegrange /ɡreɪndʒ/ noun [countable] TBBa large country house with farm buildings
Examples from the Corpus
grange• The grooms and novices led away the horses, and wheeled away the light carriage into the grange court for housing.• The description of the grange is lacking any energy as is Mariana.• The first lines of Tennyson's poem reflect the neglect of the grange.• Um, speaking about projects, the uh grange park there, that proposed park at the grange building there.• On our estate were granges, barns, a mill, carp ponds, lush fields and fertile meadows.Origin grange (1200-1300) French Latin granum; → GRAIN