0 a person, especially a woman, whose job is to organize another person's house and deal with cooking, cleaning, etc.
1 a person, usually a woman, whose job is to take care of another person’s house, esp. by cleaning it
The different jobs as waiter, housekeeper, nurse, and more can last for three months, six months, or longer.
The productive value (product utility) of home production may best be estimated by taking the wage rate of a professional housekeeper.
This last figure was unexpectedly higher than the percentage (62 %) of women living alone who were principal housekeepers.
Here the central tragic theme is the muchlamented metamorphosis of the seventeenth-century business woman or diligent housekeeper into the nineteenth-century parasite.
The housekeepers were asked to clean the surface of the bathrooms.
Wood does not release her, does not relinquish his name for her, and persists in calling her his "molly," the housekeeper he owns.
Among those who lived with one or more others, only 11 per cent of men were principal housekeepers, compared with 73 per cent of women.
What do we say to other patients, visitors, and staff members, such as physicians, nurses, housekeepers, and dietary workers, who might hear the patient?
中文繁体
管家,(尤指)女管家…
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管家,(尤指)女管家…
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empleado, -a del hogar, gobernanta…
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empregada, governanta…
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家政婦…
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gündelikçi, ev temizlikçisi/hizmetçisi…
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gouvernante…
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treballador, -a de la llar…
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