释义 |
ser·vant I. \ˈsərvənt, ˈsə̄v-, ˈsəiv-, dial ˈsärv- or ˈsȧv-\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Old French, from present participle of servir to serve — more at serve 1. : a person bound to do the bidding of a master or superior : one that must work for another and obey him: as a. : one that performs duties about the person or home of a master or employer : a personal or domestic attendant b. : a person in the employ and subject to the direction of an individual or company : a wage-earning employee c. : something (as an animal, tool, or machine) that serves the purposes of another : an object or device used as an instrument < organization and machinery, which should be our servants and not our masters, demand we should adapt ourselves to them — J.B.Priestley > < electricity, this marvelous servant that turns factory wheels — Leonard Engel > < make atomic energy a servant of man > 2. : an adherent or agent of a god or of the Deity 3. obsolete : an avowed suitor for a woman's affections : one that pays court to her or dances attendance on her; also : paramour 4. servants plural, obsolete : a troupe of actors under the patronage of an English king or nobleman < his majesty's servants > 5. : a government official considered as the servant of his sovereign or of the public < a servant of her majesty the queen > : public servant — compare civil servant 6. : slave 7. : a member of Jehovah's Witnesses who functions in capacities like those of a clergyman II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) 1. obsolete : to make subject : subordinate 2. obsolete : to furnish with a servant 3. obsolete : to act as servant — used in the phrase to servant it |