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  1. Dictionary
    serf
    /səːf/

    noun

    • 1. an agricultural labourer bound by the feudal system who was tied to working on their lord's estate. historical

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. A serf is a servant or laborer of olden times who was treated as part of the land worked on and went along with the land if it was sold. Learn more about the etymology, history, and synonyms of serf from Merriam-Webster Dictionary.

  3. A serf was a low-class farm worker who had to obey the landowner in medieval times. Learn more about the history, synonyms, and usage of the word serf from Cambridge Dictionary.

  4. A serf is a person who is bound to the land and the lord in feudalism, or a worker who is exploited in the service sector. Learn more about the origin, synonyms, and examples of the word serf from Dictionary.com.

  5. A serf is a person who is forced to work on a plot of land, especially during the medieval period when Europe practiced feudalism, when a few lords owned all the land and everyone else had to toil on it.

  6. Dec 4, 2018 · A serf was an unfree labourer who worked the land of a landowner in return for protection and a small plot of land. Learn about the origins, rights and obligations of serfs in medieval Europe and how they differed from slaves.

  7. A serf is a person who is legally bound to a feudal lord and his land, and who performs labor for him in exchange for a share of the land. Learn more about the history, synonyms, and translations of the word serf from various sources.

  8. A serf was a person who had to work on a lord's land and could not leave without his permission. Learn more about the history, synonyms, and usage of the word serf from Collins English Dictionary.