From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishmaisonettemai‧son‧ette /ˌmeɪzəˈnet/ noun [countable] British EnglishTBB an apartment on two floors that has its own front door and is part of a larger building
Examples from the Corpus
maisonette• We moved to another flat and then to a maisonette on the same estate.• I pulled up in front of a council maisonette.• It was the image of returning once again to her empty maisonette in Ealing.• Polly's landlord claimed that Polly lived in a studio-style maisonette and had set the rent accordingly.• When we could have the maisonette for the same price.• Risto Gojkovic, 45, said to be worth £4m, had argued that his wife should receive the maisonette and £532,000.• The vapour exploded and a huge fireball ripped through the maisonette.• The maisonette in Plymouth which she and husband Gilbert share with two of their six children is to get a dream kitchen.