scullery-maid

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

scullery-maid (plural scullery-maids)

  1. Alternative form of scullery maid
    • 1893 February, George Somes Layard, “The Doom of the Domestic Cook”, in The Nineteenth Century: A Monthly Review, volume XXXIII, number CXCII, New York: Leonard Scott Publication Co.; London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Limited, page 312:
      Of course, it will be objected, in the case of the large and very large houses, that it has been customary to take the cooks and scullery-maids into the country for the summer months, and that, where the families adopt the central supply kitchen system, they will be cookless and scullery-maidless in their rural homes.
    • 1895, Marie Corelli, chapter XI, in The Sorrows of Satan, or The Strange Experience of One Geoffrey Tempest, Millionaire, London: Methuen & Co., pages 125–126:
      “Ah then, you may be sure that when the scullery-maid was dancing, he observed her steps with the closest nicety;” said Lucio—“[] He dabbled in hypnotic science when he was with me in India; I have often warned him of the danger there is in practising this force on the uninitiated. But—a scullery-maid!—heavens!—there are so many scullery-maids! One more or less with the ‘jumps’ will not matter. []
    • 1907, Frank [Collins] Richardson, 2835 Mayfair, New York, N.Y.: Mitchell Kennerley, page 17:
      “Not so much of your Ada! My name ain’t Ada,” she said, tilting up her nose. “I thought all scullery-maids were called Ada,” answered Reggie. “That shows what little you know about scullery-maids, mister, and you don’t know anything at all about me. I’m not a scullery-maid. I’m an under-housemaid. []