0 someone in a hotel who cleans clothes --
1 to clean, especially the inside of, something: --
2 (esp. in the past) the personal male servant of a wealthy man, or (in the present) an employee of a restaurant or hotel, who puts your car in a parking space for you: --
In turn the valets were able to give orders to the "huissiers" or ushers, footmen, pages, and other ordinary servants.
Valets, in general, rarely cut promos, instead simply making their presence felt by accompanying a wrestler during his promo.
Their new roles required them to act as porters, waiters, valets, and entertainers, all rolled into one person.
He also relied heavily on valets, maids and butlers of his own household and those of his clients.
Typical features of valets include trouser hangers, jacket hangers, shoe bars, and a tray organizer for miscellaneous, day-to-day objects like wallets and keys.
I am sure that the same accommodation can be made with transport drivers, jockeys, valets and all the other heroes who work in the racing industry.
Valets are now thin on the ground but party conferences are very much the same; in fact, with their fringe meetings, they are perhaps the more so.
Is it to extend to the valets and kitchen staff that they may bring with them, and the secretaries and bodyguards?