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Discover Ludwig"old manor" is both correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to an old house or estate, typically one that had been owned by someone of elevated rank or high social standing. For example, "The old manor had been in the family for generations, but the new owners decided to turn it into a hotel."
Exact(47)
The shabby old manor was shaded by moss-smothered oaks and fronted by colonnaded verandas.
The book is set at an old manor house in Yorkshire.
Yet the sinister bad guys of his old manor are circling: "Wild Bill?" sneers one, "Mild Bill, more like".
The wedding will be a weekend party in an old manor house which has been converted into a youth hostel.
Cindy Matchett, a Universal Brotherhood minister, officiated at the Stevens Estate at Osgood Hill, an old manor house.
I look out on a beautiful scene from my office - the old manor house, the trees, the walled garden.
Similar(13)
Desmond appeared in 1792 and was followed by her best work, The Old Manor-House (1793).
Describes the old manor-house of the Tudors at Knole, England, and its history which began in the century which saw the Conqueror leave Dives, but the greater part of it was built by Henry VIII.
A few years ago, the 85-year-old manor would have commanded three times as much, he said.
Seatuck had occupied a small house on that property and had hoped to lease offices in its 150-year-old manor house.
Accommodation, in five en-suite bedrooms, is in the 700-year-old manor house just across a courtyard from the school.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com