Talk:Neia Baraja/@comment-132.203.109.191-20171004180402/@comment-26144500-20171005045401

Yes, a servant is a servant, one who serves others domestically or for other menial tasks. While it can it be used a term to lower yourself in comparison to your ruler(like the NPCs do when referring to themselves as servants of Ainz), they aren't actually servants(though the 41 homunculus maid are servants).

A squire, historically while in context to the paladin order(and all other medieval institutions), is a page, an apprentice under a knight(or a paladin here).

Another big difference is that with Squire there is the meaning that the person won't stay a squire and will become a knight(or paladin here) after his/her training is complete. On the other hand, there is no such meaning for a servant. A servant will simply continue to serve or stop being a servant(depending on the circumstances). The implied meaning of the term one of continuity. There is no advancement in rank from being a servant other than becoming a higher rank servant, but that is still a servant. You don't graduate and become the master.

(oh, and I was the one who made the comment above about how it should be Squire rather than Servant)