maid

noun
/meɪd/US/med/

Etymology

From Middle English mayde, maide, abbreviation of Middle English maiden from Old English mæġden (Old English mǣden). Ultimately from Proto-West Germanic *magaþ, from Proto-Germanic *magaþs (“girl, virgin”).

  1. derived from *magaþs
  2. derived from *magaþ
  3. derived from mǣden
  4. derived from mæġden
  5. inherited from mayde

Definitions

  1. A girl or an unmarried young woman

    A girl or an unmarried young woman; maiden.

  2. An adult or adolescent female servant or cleaner (short for maidservant). (In feudal…

    An adult or adolescent female servant or cleaner (short for maidservant). (In feudal times this could be anyone from a high-ranking assistant to a low-ranking cleaner.)

  3. A virgin, now female but originally one of either gender.

    • You are betrothed both to a maid and man.
  4. + 6 more definitions
    1. To serve as lady's maid to, to wait upon.

      • And as she did so there came to her a comfortable recollection, an incident of her long-past youth, in the days when she, then Ellen Green, had maided a dear old lady.
    2. The constellation and zodiacal sign Virgo.

      • Virgo, the Maid, guideth the Womb, Midriff and Guts.
      • The diamond is said to typify innocence, and it is also associated with Virgo, the maid, in the Signs of the Zodiac, whilst the ruby is associated with the sign Aries, the ram.
      • For they are so easy to recall if you do it in associated pairs—like the Maid and the Twins, the Bull and the Rain, the Fishes and the Scales.
    3. Joan of Arc

    4. Acronym of medical assistance in dying.

    5. Acronym of mobile advertising ID.

    6. Alternative form of MAID (“medical assistance in dying”).

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for maid. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA