varlet
English
Etymology
From Old French varlet. Compare valet.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈvɑːlət/
Noun
varlet (plural varlets)
- (obsolete) A servant or attendant.
- 1840, [James Fenimore Cooper], chapter I, in Mercedes of Castile: Or, The Voyage to Cathay. […], volume I, Philadelphia, Pa.: Lea and Blanchard, →OCLC, page 19:
- The varlet, or follower of the merchant, who was still a youth, though his vigorous frame and embrowned cheek denoted equally severe exercise and rude exposure, started and reddened at this free inquiry, which was enforced by a hand slapped familiarly on his knee, and such a squeeze of the leg as denoted the freedom of the camp.
- 1843 April, Thomas Carlyle, chapter 8, in Past and Present, American edition, Boston, Mass.: Charles C[offin] Little and James Brown, published 1843, →OCLC, book II (The Ancient Monk):
- The Winchester Manorhouse has fled bodily, like a Dream of the old Night […] . House and people, royal and episcopal, lords and varlets, where are they?
- (historical) Specifically, a youth acting as a knight's attendant at the beginning of his training for knighthood.
- 1891, A[rthur] Conan Doyle, The White Company, New York, N.Y., Boston, Mass.: Thomas Y[oung] Crowell & Company […], →OCLC, page 138:
- [T]here was a little, sleek, fat clerk of the name of Chaucer, who was so apt at rondel, sirvente, or tonson, that no man dare give back a foot from the walls, lest he find it all set down in his rhymes and sung by every underling and varlet in the camp.
- (archaic) A rogue or scoundrel.
- 1749, Henry Fielding, Tom Jones, Folio Society, published 1973, page 410:
- My lady to be called a nasty Scotch wh–re by such a varlet!—To be sure I wish I had knocked his brains out with the punchbowl.
- 1886, Henry James, chapter VIII, in The Bostonians, London, New York, N.Y.: Macmillan and Co., →OCLC, pages 57–58:
- He was false, cunning, vulgar, ignoble; the cheapest kind of human product […] The white, puffy mother, with the high forehead, in the corner there, looked more like a lady; but if she were one, it was all the more shame to her to have mated with such a varlet, Ransom said to himself, making use, as he did generally, of terms of opprobrium extracted from the older English literature.
- (obsolete, card games) The jack.
Translations
A servant or attendant
a youth acting as a knight's attendant at the beginning of his training for knighthood
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a rogue or scoundrel
Old French
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