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Synonyms and antonyms of Servants in American Thesaurus

Servants

amah (noun)

a woman who is a servant or whose job is to take care of her employer’s children in southern and eastern Asia

butler (noun)

the most important male servant in a rich person’s house, whose job is to organize the other servants, to welcome guests, to pour wine at meals, etc.

cabin boy (noun)

a boy who worked on a ship as a servant in the past

domestic service (noun)

the work of being a servant in someone’s house, especially in the past

footman (noun)

a male servant, especially in the past, who wore a uniform and opened doors for people

girl (noun)

old-fashioned a young woman who works as a servant or in a store, office etc.

handmaiden (noun)

old-fashioned a woman who is someone’s servant

help (noun)

a person or people that someone pays to work for them in their house

houseboy (noun)

old-fashioned a boy or man who works as a servant in someone’s house. Many people now consider this word to be offensive.

housemaid (noun)

old-fashioned a woman servant whose job is to keep someone’s house clean and neat

indentured servant (noun)

American in the past, a worker who agreed to work for no salary for a specific number of years because their employer had paid for their travel to America and for living costs

Jeeves (noun)

Britishinformal a man who is a personal servant for another man

lackey (noun)

literary an old word meaning a “servant

maidservant (noun)

an old word meaning “a woman employed as a servant

major-domo (noun)

old-fashioned the most senior servant in a large house with many servants

man (noun)

old-fashioned a servant

manservant (noun)

an old word meaning “a man who is a servant, especially to another man”

master (noun)

old-fashioned a man who has control over servants or other people who work for him

mistress (noun)

old-fashioned a woman who is in charge of a house and servants

page (noun)

a boy whose job was to be the servant of someone of a high social class in the past

retainer (noun)

old-fashioned a servant, especially one who has worked for someone from a high social class for a long time

serf (noun)

in the past, someone who lived and worked on land belonging to another person and who could not leave without that person’s permission

serfdom (noun)

the condition of being a serf

servant (noun)

someone whose job is to cook, clean, or do other work in someone else’s home

valet (noun)

a man whose job is to take care of another man’s clothes and cook his meals

wench (noun)

an old word for a “young woman,” often a servant