Servant in a sentence as a noun

The servant might cost $150 a month, split 4 ways.

I don't care if it has less space than a nomad, just don't make me be its servant.

They really should call them "indentured servant slave visas".

Be someone else's servant, because you want ... money?

I believe this is why the idea of a 'servant' is so distasteful to an American.

They might have a decent motorcycle but not a car..They split the cost of the servant who comes from another part of India.

H1-B leaves a person in a limbo world where they are essentially an indentured servant of the company.

His wife, a public servant, is implicated in the ******* of a well-loved young man and a great deal of anger is coming her way.

A lifetime servant is conditioned to be deferential, in every part of their life, not just while working.

Shipping a human being overseas to be a servant with the expectation that they will be underpaid doesn't make this okay.

Having lived in the US, and then having encountered 'servants' in other countries, a striking difference is the respect for the person when they are not 'on duty'.

It's like when a politician who spends his entire life as a "civil servant" is obviously and publicly living a billionaire lifestyle with yhahts, mansions & private jets.

Yeah good point, it would be much better if every civil servant in every government department in the entire nation-state all collectively only focussed on one national priority at a time.

> Last week, I watched with bewilderment as India’s most vociferous talk show host, Arnab Goswami, repeatedly asked his guests if they expected an Indian diplomat who is paid $4,180 a month to pay her domestic servant $4,500 a month.

I'm sure his diversity is only skin deep, and that being born in Hyderabad to an Indian civil servant and migrating to America as an adult had no effect on his personality, experience, or opinions.

Servant definitions

noun

a person working in the service of another (especially in the household)

See also: retainer

noun

in a subordinate position; "theology should be the handmaiden of ethics"; "the state cannot be a servant of the church"

See also: handmaid handmaiden