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单词 chambermaid
释义

chambermaidn.

Brit. /ˈtʃeɪmbəmeɪd/, U.S. /ˈtʃeɪmbərˌmeɪd/
Forms: see chamber n. and maid n.1
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: chamber n., maid n.1
Etymology: < chamber n. + maid n.1 Compare Middle French, French femme de chambre (second half of the 14th cent.), (now rare) fille de chambre (1550 or earlier), Dutch kamerjuffer (Middle Dutch camerjoncvrouwe , camerjoffrouwe ), kamermaagd (Middle Dutch camermaget , kamermaight , etc.), Middle Low German kāmerjuncvrouwe , kāmermāget , German Kammerjungfer (15th cent. as kamerjonffer ), Kammerjungfrau (1474), Kammermagd (beginning of the 15th cent. as kammermagt ), all in sense ‘lady's maid’. Compare earlier chamberer n. and its French etymon.
1. A lady's maid. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > subjection > service > servant > personal or domestic servant > attendant or personal servant > [noun] > lady's maid
chamberlaina1400
waiting-maid1561
chambermaid1569
lady's maid1577
tire-woman1615
abigail1616
fille de chambre1673
suivante1674
comb-brush1702
tiring-woman1732
femme de chambre1741
lady's woman1748
personal maid1748
comb-brusher1751
ayah1782
wardrobe maid1797
soubrette1824
camerist1838
tire-maid1871
1569 E. Fenton tr. P. Boaistuau Certaine Secrete Wonders Nature xxxvii. f. 129 Diuers souldioures had violated their hostesse chamber maide [Fr. la chambriere de leur hostesse].
1590 R. Greene Neuer too Late i. 50 He vnderstood by her chamber maide that she was at home.
1658 A. Cokayne Small Poems 35 Ask but a Chamber-maid..what her young Lady doth.
1691 Satyr against French 15 She must be thought ill-manner'd or ill-bred Whose Woman, Confident, or Chambermaid Did not in France suck in her first-breath'd Air.
1719–20 J. Swift Let. to Young Gentleman (1721) 6 He used to consult one of his Lady's Chambermaids.
1770 G. Colman Portrait i. 2 When a smart gallant Makes amorous advances, A modern lady trusts her chambermaid.
1833 Lady Morgan Manor Sackville i, in Dramatic Scenes I. 20 The out-of-livery servants, sir, and a young woman as called herself my Lady's own chambermaid.
1896 Times 25 Feb. 14/4 An English lady was robbed of jewels worth 30,000f. She accused her chambermaid.
1934 PMLA 49 797 Maria, a chambermaid, marries a knight who is uncle, or at least cousin, to her noble mistress.
1987 Times (Nexis) 11 Nov. The company set up a court of love with the lady's chambermaid as queen.
2.
a. A woman employed to clean the bedrooms in a house or hotel.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > subjection > service > servant > personal or domestic servant > domestic servant > [noun] > servant having care of bedchambers > woman or girl
chamberer1340
chambermaid1578
chambress1656
femme de chambre1800
1578 H. Wotton tr. J. Yver Courtlie Controuersie v. 272 Bearded men weare biggins, driueling and dandeling in their mothers lappes, betwene sisters and the chambermaids [Fr. entre leur seur & la chambriere].
1587 Sir P. Sidney & A. Golding tr. P. de Mornay Trewnesse Christian Relig. xxxiv. 634 He whom the Chambermayd had made amazed.
c1610 Lady Compton in Grose's Antiquarian Repertory (1808) III. 438 Not pestering my Things with my Womens, nor theirs with Chambermaids, nor theirs with Washmaids.
a1642 J. Suckling Goblins iii. 31 in Fragmenta Aurea (1646) Camber maides, and country wenches About thirty.
1700 T. Brown Amusem. Serious & Comical x. 128 My Grandmother was never without a Dozen Chamber-Maids and Nurses in Family.
a1774 A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued (1777) III. iv. xxix. 153 A ballad tune sung by the coarse-piped chamber maid.
1803 Censor 1 Mar. 31 Six-pence to the chamber-maid, six-pence to the ostler, and six-pence to the jack-boot.
1849 J. W. Carlyle Lett. II. 70 The chamber-maid came to say a gentleman was asking for me.
1922 D. H. Lawrence Aaron's Rod (N.Y. ed.) xiv. 200 He did not notice the dinner-gong, and only the arrival of the chamber-maid..sent him down to the restaurant.
1951 G. Heyer Quiet Gentleman xxii. 329 The housekeeper..bustled in, armed with smelling-salts and sal volatile, and followed by a couple of chambermaids.
1998 Independent 6 May ii. 5/4 I've been unfortunate enough to work as a chambermaid myself, in a scuzzy hotel in Paris.
b. Theatre. The type of a light comedy role for a woman, as a lady's maid, waitress, etc. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > part or character > [noun] > types of part or character
underpart1679
persona muta1714
travesty1732
soubrette1753
old man1762
small part?1774
breeches-part1779
character part1811
fat1812
chambermaida1828
fool?1835
raisonneur1845
ingénue1848
villain of the piece1854
stock character1864
feeder1866
satirette1870
character role1871
travesty1887
thinking part1890
walk-on1902
cardboard cutout1906
bit1926
good guy1928
feed1929
bad guy1932
goody1934
walkthrough1935
narrator1941
cameo1950
black hat1959
a1828 J. Bernard Retrospections of Stage (1830) I. x. 281 Mrs Gardner of the Haymarket, a chambermaid actress of great merit.
1850 C. Lyell 2nd Visit U.S. (ed. 2) II. 216 She liked much to act chambermaid, as then she was not expected to learn her part so accurately.
1885 W. C. Day Behind Footlights 120 We have the..singing chambermaid, to whose fascination, loquacity and chronic curiosity..the audience is indebted for no inconsiderable portion of its enjoyment.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

chambermaidv.

Brit. /ˈtʃeɪmbəmeɪd/, U.S. /ˈtʃeɪmbərˌmeɪd/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: chambermaid n.
Etymology: < chambermaid n. Compare later maid v.
intransitive. To perform the work of a chambermaid (chambermaid n. 2a); to clean and tidy bedrooms. Also occasionally transitive: to clean and tidy (a bedroom).
ΚΠ
1875 T. Yelverton Teresina in Amer. II. xxiv. 270 Biddy, with her ten years chamber-maiding, her husband bar-keeping, soon realizes an independence.
1920 O. R. Cohen Come Seven 287 She ransacked the storehouse of memory for such scraps of movie vernacular and bits of professional patter as she had heard drip from the incarnadined lips of the stars for whom she had chambermaided.
1998 Observer (Nexis) 15 Mar. 50 You have to leave your room at an appointed hour or it won't get chambermaided.
2004 J. Libaire Here Kitty Kitty 14 On the Cape, I chambermaided at a motor lodge, lifting a pair of cuff links here,a pint of Southern Comfort there.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, November 2010; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

> as lemmas

chamber-maid
a. A female servant or attendant; a maidservant; often with defining word prefixed as bar-maid, chamber-maid, farm-maid, house-maid, nurse-maid, servant-maid, etc.; lady's maid (see lady's maid n.). Cf. maiden n. 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > subjection > service > servant > [noun] > woman or girl
maidenOE
schelchenec1000
womanOE
maidc1300
ancillec1366
wench1380
child-womana1382
maidservanta1382
serving-womana1398
servantessa1425
servant maid?a1450
woman servant1450
servitrice1477
administress1483
ministressa1500
serving maid?1529
maiden-servant1533
servitrix1566
miskin-fro1585
servant girl1658
girl1668
necessary womanc1689
scout1708
servitress1827
ancilla1871
c1300 St. Mary Magdalen (Laud) 492 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 476 Heo haueȝ i-beon min hou[s]wif, mi mayde, and mi norice.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) i. 2573 Sche..goth to chambre and hath compleigned Unto a Maide which sche triste.
1461 in F. B. Bickley Little Red Bk. Bristol (1900) II. 127 No person..sett..his seid wyfe, daughter, or maide to no suche occupacion of weuyng.
a1535 T. More Hist. Richard III in Wks. (1557) 59/1 Yt it was not princely to mary hys owne subiect,..onely as it were a rich man that would mary his mayde.
1567 Compend. Bk. Godly Songs (rev. ed.) f. 6 Thy nychtbouris wyfe..Thow couet not, to the..his oxe, his maide nor page.
a1684 J. Evelyn Diary anno 1658 (1955) III. 208 He [sc. a child] would..select the most pathetical Psalmes,..to reade to his Mayde, during his sicknesse.
1698 H. Wanley in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Eminent Literary Men (1843) 258 The maid told me that Dr. Smith had been there since I went.
1794 A. Radcliffe Myst. of Udolpho II. xii. 466 You must dismiss your maid, lady.
1835 Gentleman's Mag. Nov. 491 We kept no maid:—and I had much to do.
1860 Queen Victoria Jrnl. (1868) 138 The two maids had driven over by another road in the waggonette.
1880 ‘Ouida’ Moths I. 39 My maid must run up something for you to wear by to-morrow.
1927 Travel Nov. 48/1 (advt.) Steward, maid, waiters, porters and barber, attending your needs.
1960 S. Unwin Truth about Publisher i. i. 20 To wait on ourselves at supper..to give the maids a Sunday evening's rest.
1991 San Francisco Chron. 26 July b5/4 She not only left her husband..but she left her cook, and her chauffeur and her maid.
extracted from maidn.1
<
n.1569v.1875
as lemmas
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