“Maid” has two common meanings today, plus a newer, very serious one as an acronym.

1. Everyday meaning of “maid”

In ordinary English, a maid is:

  • A female domestic worker who does housework such as cleaning, laundry, sometimes cooking and errands.
  • Often working in a private home or hotel (for example, “hotel maid,” “kitchen maid,” “chambermaid”).
  • Historically, a “maid” or “maidservant” was a live‑in servant in wealthier households, especially in places like Victorian England.

Older usage:

  • “Maid” was also short for “maiden,” meaning an unmarried young woman, sometimes implying a virgin, which you still see in older literature or phrases like “old maid.”

Quick example

Imagine a large old house in 1900: one woman might work there as a chamber maid (taking care of bedrooms) while another is a kitchen maid (helping the cook).

2. MAID / MAiD as end‑of‑life term

In recent years, MAID / MAiD is also widely used as an acronym for Medical Aid in Dying or Medical Assistance in Dying.

This usually means:

  • A medical process where a doctor or other authorized clinician provides or prescribes medication that a terminally ill, consenting patient can use to end their life and shorten the dying process.
  • It is tightly regulated, legally and medically, and is a major ethical and political topic in places that allow it.

Because this is about illness, death, and personal suffering, discussions around MAID/MAiD are considered serious and sensitive , and people often have strong moral or religious views on it.

If you tell me which one you meant—household “maid” or MAID/MAiD in healthcare—I can go deeper into the latest debates, laws, or forum‑style discussions around it.