Dictionary
barmaid
noun
A woman who serves in a bar
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The word 'barmaid' is correct and usable in written English.
It refers to a woman who works in a bar, serving drinks and sometimes food to customers. Example: The barmaid at the local pub greeted me with a warm smile as I walked in. She took my order and expertly mixed my favorite cocktail. I always enjoy chatting with her while I enjoy my drink.
Exact(60)
She was now gradually moving into more mature roles as the mother of heroes and heroines, though she was still seen as a servant, a barmaid, or a hotel manager, the latter in Maigret Voit Rouge (Maigret Sees Red, 1963), with Gabin in the title role.
Now the barmaid complains that business is terrible.
First, choose your lover from a list: do you fancy a barmaid, a mountaineer, a DJ or simply someone posh?
The barmaid at the sole licensed establishment in the long-haul Terminal 5 of Chicago O'Hare airport was Polish, and offered a Polish lager brewed in America, mind you—on tap.
"He won't listen," sighs Janet, the barmaid, wiping beer glasses.
Not suitable for vegetarians.DiningChez Tantalus: See your dinner hover over you, but never quite get close enough to eat!Bar Lethe: A popular, even crowded, establishment, despite the slow and surly service of barmaid Medusa.
"Magda", a barmaid at the café, works down the road from her old village, acting as a scout for her family, waiting in Croatia for a chance to return home.
For her novels set in the slums of Sydney Foveaux (1939), Ride On, Stranger (1943), and Tell Morning This (1967)—Tennant lived in poor areas of the city and took jobs ranging from social worker to barmaid.
July 1756 London, England April 22, 1827 London, England Thomas Rowlandson, (born July 1756, Old Jewry, London, Eng. died April 22 , 1827 London) English painter and caricaturist who illustrated the life of 18th-century England and created comic images of familiar social types of his day, such as the antiquarian, the old maid, the blowsy barmaid, and the Grub Street hack.
The son of a commercial artist and a barmaid, Osborne used insurance money from his father's death in 1941 for a boarding- school education at Belmont College, Devon.
Like Joseph K., he makes love to a servant, the barmaid Frieda, but she leaves him when she discovers that he is simply using her.
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