Lord's ground's style given by commentator (5)
I believe the answer is:
manor
'style given by commentator' is the definition.
The answer and definition can be both man-made objects as well as being singular nouns.
Maybe you can see a link between them that I don't see?
'lord's ground's' is the wordplay.
I cannot really see how this works, but
'ground' could be 'man' (Man is an example) and 'man' is present in the answer.
The remaining letters 'or' is a valid word which might be clued in a way I don't see.
This may be the basis of the clue (or it may be nonsense).
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for manor that I've seen before include "Big house - police district" , "Grand country house" , "Operational base" , "Land once belonging to a nobleman" , "Grand but strange Roman house" .)