In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female. The gender noun for a female servant can be maid or housemaid.
The gender of a lady servant is female. Some nouns for female servants are housekeeper, lady in waiting, maid, milk maid, house maid, or domestic.
The noun manservant is gender specific for a male, usually a servant that tends to the need of a man. The equivalent noun for a female servant that tends to the needs of a female is lady's maid. The noun maidservant is a word for a general female servant rather than a servant that tends the needs of one person.
The term servant is not usually gender specific and is a universal title. To make it gender specific for female use maid.
The feminine gender of "man servant" is "maidservant" or simply "maid." While "man servant" refers to a male who serves, "maidservant" denotes a female who performs similar duties. In contemporary language, the term "housekeeper" or "domestic worker" may be used in a more gender-neutral context.
From what i gather from reading Exodus 20:17, the feminine version of a manservent is a maidservent. :)
Well, the gender of a servant is both male and female...
MaidHousekeeperCookNanny
It is a maid servant
It is a maid servant
the male in the family unit treats the female as a secret servant
servant refers to both male and female, it is not gender specific.