| 释义 | 
		Definition of housekeeper in English: housekeepernoun ˈhaʊskiːpəˈhaʊsˌkipər 1A person employed to manage a household. (多指女性)管家 Example sentencesExamples -  In this Golden Age, the heroes were neither cops nor outlaws, doctors nor housekeepers, ranch-owners nor lawyers, spies nor mafia hoods.
 -  Although she has the support of doctors, nurses and housekeepers, the former First Lady oversees her husband's care, despite the effect it has on her own health.
 -  People with occupational exposure to latex include medical professionals, housekeepers, tire manufacturers, and latex industry workers.
 -  She manages with a part-time housekeeper, Helen, who moves in full time if she is away.
 -  He is a bachelor so he might want to employ a housekeeper and a gardener, but that's up to him.
 -  The owner fled the scene before police arrived, leaving the housekeeper and the girls inside their rooms.
 -  Similarly, women in domestic service as housekeepers or parlour maids had to make a choice between work and marriage.
 -  Personal staff costs - for two butlers, a valet, four chefs, two chauffeurs, eight housekeepers, eight gardeners and a secretariat - are probably another £1m.
 -  Even without abuse per se, long hours of isolated, physically exhausting domestic labor for live-in nannies, cooks and housekeepers can extend beyond what most employees would tolerate.
 -  Critics from both the right and the left accuse middle-class women of neglecting their children and exploiting the immigrant women they employ as nannies and housekeepers.
 -  At a job fair on Sunday, one firm was employing men housekeepers only and offering high remuneration.
 -  The striking workers include part-time housekeepers, cooks, ticket takers, ushers, bartenders, concession workers, servers, and conversion and ice crews.
 -  He had taken Spanish in high school and also learned a lot from the Hispanic housekeepers his family had employed throughout the years.
 -  In the towns, people work as street vendors, in the construction industry, as maids and housekeepers, or as plumbers, electricians, or carpenters.
 -  In a scheme being piloted for the first time outside London, affluent city workers can employ Filipino housekeepers, who combine nannying skills with domestic service.
 -  They will include chefs, housekeepers and waiters as well as business owners.
 -  In other cases, women answered advertisements by foreign tour operators or employment agencies looking for au pairs, models, housekeepers and waitresses.
 -  Then rent a fully staffed luxury villa in Mallorca that comes with a butler, chef, housekeeper, maid and gardener.
 -  During the fall and winter, cooks, housekeepers, and other attendants saw to the owners' needs.
 -  This includes approximately 75,000 workers who serve the rich and very rich in such jobs as limousine drivers, nannies, housekeepers, waiters and bellhops.
 
 - 1.1 A person employed to perform cleaning and other domestic tasks in a hotel or institution.
 
    Definition of housekeeper in US English: housekeepernounˈhousˌkēpərˈhaʊsˌkipər 1A person employed to manage a household. (多指女性)管家 Example sentencesExamples -  They will include chefs, housekeepers and waiters as well as business owners.
 -  The striking workers include part-time housekeepers, cooks, ticket takers, ushers, bartenders, concession workers, servers, and conversion and ice crews.
 -  Then rent a fully staffed luxury villa in Mallorca that comes with a butler, chef, housekeeper, maid and gardener.
 -  In the towns, people work as street vendors, in the construction industry, as maids and housekeepers, or as plumbers, electricians, or carpenters.
 -  Although she has the support of doctors, nurses and housekeepers, the former First Lady oversees her husband's care, despite the effect it has on her own health.
 -  People with occupational exposure to latex include medical professionals, housekeepers, tire manufacturers, and latex industry workers.
 -  In this Golden Age, the heroes were neither cops nor outlaws, doctors nor housekeepers, ranch-owners nor lawyers, spies nor mafia hoods.
 -  Even without abuse per se, long hours of isolated, physically exhausting domestic labor for live-in nannies, cooks and housekeepers can extend beyond what most employees would tolerate.
 -  Critics from both the right and the left accuse middle-class women of neglecting their children and exploiting the immigrant women they employ as nannies and housekeepers.
 -  He is a bachelor so he might want to employ a housekeeper and a gardener, but that's up to him.
 -  The owner fled the scene before police arrived, leaving the housekeeper and the girls inside their rooms.
 -  This includes approximately 75,000 workers who serve the rich and very rich in such jobs as limousine drivers, nannies, housekeepers, waiters and bellhops.
 -  Personal staff costs - for two butlers, a valet, four chefs, two chauffeurs, eight housekeepers, eight gardeners and a secretariat - are probably another £1m.
 -  In a scheme being piloted for the first time outside London, affluent city workers can employ Filipino housekeepers, who combine nannying skills with domestic service.
 -  During the fall and winter, cooks, housekeepers, and other attendants saw to the owners' needs.
 -  At a job fair on Sunday, one firm was employing men housekeepers only and offering high remuneration.
 -  In other cases, women answered advertisements by foreign tour operators or employment agencies looking for au pairs, models, housekeepers and waitresses.
 -  He had taken Spanish in high school and also learned a lot from the Hispanic housekeepers his family had employed throughout the years.
 -  She manages with a part-time housekeeper, Helen, who moves in full time if she is away.
 -  Similarly, women in domestic service as housekeepers or parlour maids had to make a choice between work and marriage.
 
 - 1.1 A person employed to perform cleaning and other domestic tasks in a hotel or institution.
 
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