valet - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Borrowed from Middle French valet, from Old French vaslet, from Medieval Latin *vassellittus, diminutive of Late Latin vassallus (“manservant, domestic, retainer”), from vassus (“servant”), from Gaulish *wassos (“young man, squire”), from Proto-Celtic *wastos (“servant”) (compare Old Irish foss and Welsh gwas). Doublet of varlet.
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈvæleɪ/, /ˈvælɪt/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈvæleɪ/, /væˈleɪ/, /ˈvælɪt/
- Rhymes: -ælɪt, -æleɪ, -eɪ
valet (plural valets)
- A man's personal male attendant, responsible for his clothes and appearance.
Synonyms: (proscribed) butler, gentleman's gentleman
Coordinate term: lady's maid - A hotel employee performing such duties for guests.
- (professional wrestling) A female performer in professional wrestling, acting as either a manager or personal chaperone; often used to attract and titillate male members of the audience.
- A female chaperone who accompanies a man, and is usually not married to him.
- (US) A person employed to clean or park cars.
Synonym: parking attendant- 2017 March 7, Stephen Maguire, “Hero Irish dad reveals he had to tell car valet he ‘wasn’t up to anything illegal’ after wife gave birth on back seat on Donegal road”, in The Irish Sun[1], archived from the original on 6 December 2021:
A HEROIC dad who helped deliver his new-born baby in the back of his car had to explain to his car valet that he wasn't involved in illegal crime.
- 2017 March 7, Stephen Maguire, “Hero Irish dad reveals he had to tell car valet he ‘wasn’t up to anything illegal’ after wife gave birth on back seat on Donegal road”, in The Irish Sun[1], archived from the original on 6 December 2021:
- A person employed to assist the jockey and trainer at a racecourse.
- A wooden stand on which to hold clothes and accessories in preparation for dressing.
- A kind of goad or stick with an iron point.
a man's personal male attendant
- Bulgarian: слуга (bg) m (sluga), камериер m (kamerier)
- Catalan: ajudant de cambra m
- Czech: komorník m
- Finnish: miespalvelija (fi), kamaripalvelija (fi)
- French: valet (fr) m, valet de chambre (fr) m, majordome (fr) m
- Georgian: კამერდინერი (ḳamerdineri), ლაქია (lakia), მოსამსახურე (mosamsaxure)
- German: Kammerdiener (de) m, Diener (de) m, Putzer m, Leibdiener (de) m, Hausdiener (de) m, Dienstbote (de) m
- Greek: υπηρέτης (el) m (ypirétis)
- Hebrew: נושא־כלים m (nosé kelím), נער (he) m (ná'ar)
- Hungarian: inas (hu)
- Indonesian: boi (id)
- Japanese: ボーイ (ja)
- Latin: pedisequus m
- Macedonian: ли́чен слу́га m (líčen slúga)
- Portuguese: mordomo (pt) m
- Romanian: valet (ro) m, fecior (ro) m, lacheu (ro) m
- Russian: камерди́нер (ru) m (kamerdíner), слуга́ (ru) m (slugá), денщи́к (ru) m (denščík) (dated), ордина́рец (ru) m (ordinárec) (dated, military)
- Scottish Gaelic: gille-coise m
- Spanish: edecán (es) m
- Swedish: kammartjänare (sv) c
- Turkish: uşak (tr)
Ottoman Turkish: اوشاق (uşak) - Yiddish: קאַמער־דינער m (kamer-diner)
a female performer in professional wrestling
a female chaperone who accompanies a man
- Bulgarian: придружителка f (pridružitelka)
- Dutch: gezelschapsdame (nl) f
- French: chaperon (fr) m, duègne (fr) f
- German: Gesellschaftsdame f, Escort m, Begleiterin (de) f, Begleitung (de) f
- Greek: συνοδός (el) f (synodós)
- Hebrew: נערת ליווי f (na'arát livúy)
- Latin: pedisequa f
- Macedonian: придру́жничка f (pridrúžnička)
- Romanian: însoțitoare (ro) f, șaperon n
- Russian: дуэ́нья (ru) f (duénʹja) (dated)
a person employed to clean or park cars
- French: valet (fr) m, voiturier (fr) m
- Galician: aparcacoches m
- German: Parkplatzwächter m, Parkplatzwächterin f
- Greek: παρκαδόρος (el) m (parkadóros)
- Indonesian: boi parkir (literally “bellboy who parks”), parkir valet
- Irish: giolla páirceála m
- Italian: parcheggiatore (it) m
- Polish: parkingowy (pl) m
- Portuguese: valet m or f, valete (pt) m or f arrumador (pt) m (Portugal), manobrista (pt) m or f
- Spanish: aparcacoches m or f
valet (third-person singular simple present valets, present participle valeting, simple past and past participle valeted)
- (transitive) To serve (someone) as a valet.
- 1866, Wilkie Collins, Armadale[2], London: Smith, Elder & Co., Volume I, Book 2, Chapter 2, p. 163:
You can valet me, can you? Bother valeting me! I like to put on my own clothes, and brush them, too, when they are on; and if I only knew how to black my own boots, by George I should like to do it! - 1926, Neville Shute, chapter 7, in Marazan[3], London: Cassell:
[…] the red-haired boy who had valeted me in the morning appeared in a plain suit of black.
- 1866, Wilkie Collins, Armadale[2], London: Smith, Elder & Co., Volume I, Book 2, Chapter 2, p. 163:
- (transitive, chiefly UK, Ireland) To clean and service (a car), as a valet does.
- 2017 March 7, Stephen Maguire, “Hero Irish dad reveals he had to tell car valet he ‘wasn’t up to anything illegal’ after wife gave birth on back seat on Donegal road”, in The Irish Sun[4], archived from the original on 6 December 2021:
He revealed: “We had been through a lot and I decided the car needed to be cleaned out after Georgina had to deliver the baby in the car.
“You can imagine the scene when I left the car in for valeting. I got some funny looks and I had to explain to the guy that I wasn’t up to anything illegal because it did look a bit like a crime scene.”
- 2017 March 7, Stephen Maguire, “Hero Irish dad reveals he had to tell car valet he ‘wasn’t up to anything illegal’ after wife gave birth on back seat on Donegal road”, in The Irish Sun[4], archived from the original on 6 December 2021:
- (transitive, US) To leave (a car) with a valet to park it.
- 2012 May 30, Jay Weston, “One of the Most Eligible Bachelors in L.A. Has 55 Ferraris.. and Takes Me for a Drive in One!”, in The Huffington Post[5], archived from the original on 13 December 2025:
I asked Giacomo if he ever valeted his car, and he twisted his face into a grimace as he replied, “Rarely, but I have done it. Nervous time.” - 2017 February 11, Rosalie R. Radomsky, “Emma Ludbrook and Tom Windish: Their First Date Was a Big Production”, in The New York Times[6], archived from the original on 26 September 2020:
“‘Is this a date?’” Ms. Ludbrook recalled thinking during dinner. “I had valeted my car, and he hadn’t. He said, ‘Bye,’ and went to his car. Clearly this was not a date.”
- 2012 May 30, Jay Weston, “One of the Most Eligible Bachelors in L.A. Has 55 Ferraris.. and Takes Me for a Drive in One!”, in The Huffington Post[5], archived from the original on 13 December 2025:
- “valet”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- “valet”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present.
Borrowed from Russian валет (valet).
valet
valet
Inherited from Old French vaslet, from Medieval Latin *vassellittus, diminutive of Late Latin vassallus (“manservant, domestic, retainer”), from Latin vassus (“servant”), from Gaulish *wassos (“young man, squire”), from Proto-Celtic *wastos (“servant”) (compare Old Irish foss and Welsh gwas).
valet m (plural valets)
- (historical) a male attendant of a knight or a lord
- (historical) officer belonging to the king's house or a princely house, also valet de chambre
- a male servant, a footman
- a wooden stand on which to hold clothes and accessories in preparation for dressing, also valet de nuit
- (card games) jack
- (especially in the form valet de menuisier) a holdfast (a hooked tool to hold a workpiece down to a workbench)
- valet d'écurie
- valet de menuisier
- → Bulgarian: вале́ (valé)
- → Greek: βαλές (valés)
- → Portuguese: valete
- → Russian: вале́т (valét)
- → Turkish: vale
| Playing cards in French · cartes à jouer (layout · text) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| as | deux | trois | quatre | cinq | six | sept |
| huit | neuf | dix | valet | dame | roi | joker |
- “valet”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012
- levât
valet
valet m (plural valets)
- manservant; (male) attendant
- French: valet
valet m (plural valets)
- (Jersey) This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
{{[rfdef](/wiki/Template:rfdef#top "Template:rfdef")}}. - (Jersey, card games) jack
- valet d'fèrme (“farmhand”)
valet n
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Unadapted borrowing from French valet.
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- (Northern Portugal) IPA(key): /bɐˈlɛ/
valet m or f by sense (plural valets)
- valet (a person employed to park cars)
valet m (plural valeți)
valet m (plural valets)
- (card games) jack, knave
- “valet”, in Diccionario de la lengua española [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (in Spanish), online version 23.8.1, Royal Spanish Academy [Spanish: Real Academia Española], 15 December 2025
valet