housemaid
See also: house maid and house-maid
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈhaʊsˌmeɪd/
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
housemaid (plural housemaids)
- A female domestic worker attached to the non-servant quarter part of the house, as opposed to a scullery maid.
- (derogatory) A housewife.
Derived terms
Translations
female servant attached to the non-servant quarter part of the house
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Verb
housemaid (third-person singular simple present housemaids, present participle housemaiding, simple past and past participle housemaided)
- To be a housemaid.
- To wait on someone hand on foot, to watch them.
- To clean, as a housemaid.
- 1950, Norman Lindsay, Dust or Polish?, Sydney: Angus and Robertson, page 32:
- Giving that up, she took a broom and a duster and went upstairs to housemaid Mrs Dibble's bedroom, with her head tied up in a coloured scarf. It was a dusty, snuffy job, for penuriousness in Mrs Dibble refused to throw anything away, including dirt, and if anything fell on the floor it remained there.