v
To live in and take care of someone's apartment while they are away.
n
(India, dated) A domestic servant in charge of household goods and clothing; a valet.
n
The proprietor of a hotel or restaurant; an innkeeper.
n
(historical) A Mexican national working as an agricultural laborer in the United States from 1942-1964, or similarly a railroad worker from 1942-1945.
n
A man in business, one who works at a commercial institution.
n
A valet, a male personal attendant.
n
One who participates in carework.
n
A man employed to carry out chores.
n
An employee at a hotel who deals with guests.
n
One who attends to the wishes of hotel guests.
n
The person in charge of an entryway, sometimes just a doorman, sometimes something more.
n
A doorman or doorwoman; a greeter.
n
Alternative form of dorter [(historical) A bedroom or dormitory, especially in a monastery.]
n
(India) A live-in doorkeeper, especially in an apartment building.
n
(historical) A man provided for any special service, especially in Irish evictions, and in saving the crops and other property of men who were boycotted.
n
A person who works on, but does not own, a farm; an agricultural labourer.
n
labourers who work in the fields.
n
A convict sentenced to perform forced labor
n
Alternative spelling of front man: a person acting as the public face of an organization. [A person acting as the public face of some other, covert group.]
n
(obsolete) A steward; an overseer.
n
An employee of a hotel who meets arriving guests and escorts them to their rooms.
n
A guild (group of tradespeople).
n
A person who is employed to perform routine chores and manual labor, especially on a farm or ranch.
n
A person who works from home.
n
The property of being a host.
n
The world or sphere of hotels.
n
Someone who runs a hotel.
n
A hotelier; a hotel owner.
n
A person who operates a hotel.
n
(UK, historical) A place, usually a public house, where journeymen connected with a particular trade assembled when out of work, ready for the call of employers.
n
Hospitality; a liberal and hospitable table; a supply of provisions.
n
Someone living in the same house.
n
Alternative spelling of house-sitter [someone who house-sits]
n
Alternative spelling of house slave [A slave who works in a home, performing domestic duties rather than fieldwork or other hard labor.]
n
Alternative spelling of hotelier [Someone who runs a hotel.]
n
(informal) An innkeeper.
n
The person responsible for the running of an inn, usually the proprietor.
n
(Philippines) A job order employee.
n
Penal servitude in a Russian or Soviet labour camp.
n
A person who owns or works in such an establishment
n
A business that spreads its costs
n
(China) Somebody who manages a microbusiness.
n
A small business, often but not always owned or operated by a family.
n
The person who runs a motel.
n
Alternative form of night watchman state [(political philosophy) A government with the least necessary power over its citizens.]
n
A friend or acquaintance of the same pub
n
(obsolete) A churchwarden's assistant; a sidesman.
n
A person who works, often on a voluntary basis, in a relief agency.
n
A forced laborer, especially those made to work in the Dutch East Indies under Japanese occupation during the Second World War.
n
A person employed by a hotel or similar establishment to clean, maintain and restock the rooms.
n
(LGBT slang, humorous, ironic) A same-sex significant other with whom one lives; a coinhabitant in a non-heterosexual relationship.
n
Alternative form of shopkeeperess
n
A social worker who engages with people on the street.
n
(Freemasonry) A doorkeeper or attendant at a lodge of Freemasons.
n
The owner of a toft, or homestead.
n
(historical) A trade broker in Japan, usually a wholesaler, warehouse manager, or shipment manager.
n
(chiefly Britain) An innkeeper.
n
A member of the Women's Army Corps.
n
(obsolete) A custom house officer; a tide waiter.
n
The role or status of a waiter.
n
(UK, historical) A man employed to preside over a nightly curfew in the city of Ripon, England.
n
Obsolete spelling of workman [A man who labours for wages.]
n
(historical, religion) A priest who took up manual labour to experience the everyday life of the working class, and gain the trust of the working class.
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