A person who bounds himself or herself to serve some one for a certain period of time in exchange for something else.
In the 1800's, there were over 10,000 Indentured Servants in Jamestown, Virginia.
An indentured servant is someone that works for a person for a certain amount of years because they payed there ocean flight that they couldnt afford meaning to send them to the country they want to live in because they didnt have enough money
Well, isn't that a happy little question! An antonym for indentured servant could be "free individual" or "voluntary worker." Just like how we paint different colors to create contrast and balance in a landscape, antonyms help us understand words better by showing their opposites.
The prefix of indentured is the in.
Servant is a a common noun.
an indentured servant
being an indentured servant (Google indentured servant colonial times)
When an indentured servant was done serving his term with his "master" in the New World, the master gave him Freedom Dues. They consisted of land, possessions, and/or money. This was part of the agreement of the indentured servant's term.
yes you do.
Technically an indentured servant serves someone under a contract. The contract may have a limited period of time after which the contract is null.
Technically an indentured servant serves someone under a contract. The contract may have a limited period of time after which the contract is null.
Indentured servant were significant in populating the early Americas. Many of the first colonists gained passage to the colonies as indentured servants.
An indentured servant was working off a debt to his employer, often the price of his passage to America.
Yes.
they die
yes
Stop treating me like an indentured servant!