meidoEtymologyFrom Japanese メイド (meido, “maid, maidservant”), from English maid.meido means A female fictional character who is employed as a maid, typically wearing a stylized French maid outfit. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 90 out of 100.nounA female fictional character who is employed as a maid, typically wearing a stylized French maid outfit.“I was really struck by how many of the bishoujo cliches it managed to bring up. We already have the older sister, younger sister, childhood friend, and exotic transfer student. We have a genki girl, a ditzy girl, a hime-sama, and a meido.”A waitress at a maid café.“Actually, the two times I was there, it was really quite dull in terms of the people wandering around. The most excitement I saw was that one candidate for Prime Minister giving a van-top speech in front of Akihabara station. Oh, and a demonstration of some RC "Tokyo Drift" toy cars out on the street. No dancing in the streets, only a very few meido (some of questionable gender >__< ), and quite a”