- (attested 1529,
according to the
Oxford English Dictionary), is a
uniformed manservant. The
modern connotation of "servile follower"
appeared later, in 1588...
- A
groom or
stable boy (stable hand,
stable lad) is a
person who is
responsible for some or all
aspects of the
management of
horses and/or the care of the...
-
housecarl (Old Norse: húskarl; Old English: huscarl) was a non-servile
manservant or
household bodyguard in
medieval Northern Europe. The
institution originated...
- Paris, Louis-Sébastien
Mercier describes the
characteristics of the
manservants (lackeys) of pre-revolutionary Paris. "An army of
useless servants is...
- such as the Isle of Skye,
according to the BBC. They are no
longer manservants or
attendants and do not
carry chiefs across rivers as in the distant...
- (David Hyde Pierce) is the
first of ****-On Head's (Paul Giamatti)
manservants, who has
turned to evil
despite ****-On Head's advice. Out of revenge...
-
Manservant and
Maidservant is a 1947
novel by Ivy Compton-Burnett. It was
published in the
United States with the
title Bullivant and the Lambs. When asked...
-
typecast as
butler or
valet and was one of Hollywood's most
familiar manservants in the 1930s and 1940s. He also
appeared in
several Laurel and Hardy...
- an open carriage.
Through the 1860s,
Victoria relied increasingly on a
manservant from Scotland, John Brown.
Rumours of a
romantic connection and even a...
- weightlifter. He portra****
Darth Vader in the
original Star Wars
trilogy and a
manservant in
Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film A
Clockwork Orange. In 2015, he starred...