Why this word is great
DONZEL — [Noun] A young squire or attendant to a knight, or an unmarried young man of noble birth. From Old French danzel and Italian donzello, both from Medieval Latin domicellus ("young nobleman, squire"), a diminutive of Latin dominus ("master, lord"). Unlike "page" (a younger boy in training) or "bachelor" (a mere unmarried man), a donzel carries the weight of nobility and the promise of knighthood. He is the lanky youth polishing his master’s armor at dawn, the rider galloping ahead with a sealed message tucked in his belt, the quiet pride in standing just outside the torchlight at the feast—a figure suspended between the raw potential of boyhood and the hardened duty of manhood, poised at the threshold of a world that may never come.