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Webster 1913 Edition


Butler

But′ler

(bŭt′lẽr)
,
Noun.
[OE.
boteler
, F.
bouteillier
a bottle-bearer, a cupbearer, fr. LL.
buticularius
, fr.
buticula
bottle. See
Bottle
a hollow vessel.]
An officer in a king’s or a nobleman's household, whose principal business it is to take charge of the liquors, plate, etc.; the head servant in a large house.
The
butler
and the baker of the king of Egypt.
Gen. xl. 5.
Your wine locked up, your
butler
strolled abroad.
Pope.

Webster 1828 Edition


Butler

BUT'LER

,
Noun.
A servant or officer in the houses of princes and great men, whose principal business is to take charge of the liquors,place, &c. Formerly, an officer in the court of France, being the same as the grand echanson or great cup-bearer of the present times.

Definition 2024


Butler

Butler

See also: butler

English

Proper noun

Butler

  1. An English and Irish occupational surname for someone who was a butler or wine servant surname.
  2. An Anglicized form of the French surname Boutilier, Boutillier, Bouthillier, of similar derivation.
  3. A town and a county in Alabama
  4. A ghost town in California
  5. A city in Georgia, USA
  6. A village in Illinois
  7. A city in Indiana
  8. A city and a county in Kentucky
  9. A city and a county in Missouri
  10. A borough in New Jersey
  11. A town in New York
  12. A village and a county in Ohio
  13. A town in Oklahoma
  14. A city in Pennsylvania
  15. A town in South Dakota
  16. A town and a village in Wisconsin

Derived terms

  • Butler River

Dutch

Etymology

From English Butler.

Proper noun

Butler ?

  1. An English and Irish occupational surname for someone who was a butler or wine servant.

German

A Butler, domestic butler

Etymology

From English butler

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbatlɐ/

Noun

Butler m (genitive Butlers, plural Butler)

  1. A butler, chief male servant, majordomo

Proper noun

Butler ? (genitive Butler)

  1. An English and Irish occupational surname for someone who was a butler or wine servant.

butler

butler

See also: Butler

English

Noun

butler (plural butlers)

  1. A manservant having charge of wines and liquors.
  2. The chief male servant of a household who has charge of other employees, receives guests, directs the serving of meals, and performs various personal services.
    • 1929, Baldwyn Dyke Acland, Filibuster, Chapter 2
      “One marble hall, with staircase complete, one butler and three flunkeys to receive a retired sojer who dares to ring the bell. D'you know, old boy, I gave my bowler to the butler, whangee to one flunkey, gloves to another, and there was the fourth poor blighter looking like an orphan at a Mothers' Meeting. …"
  3. A valet, a male personal attendant.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

butler (third-person singular simple present butlers, present participle butlering, simple past and past participle butlered)

  1. To buttle, to dispense wines or liquors; to take the place of a butler.

References

  1. Etymonline