The Collaborative International Dictionary
factotum \fac*to"tum\ (f[a^]k*t[=o]"t[u^]m), n.; pl. factotums
(-t[u^]mz). [L., do everything; facere to do + totus all :
cf. F. factotum. See Fact, and Total.]
A person employed to do all kinds of work or business; a
person with many different responsibilities.
--B. Jonson.
Wiktionary
n. (context obsolete English) (plural of factotum English)
Usage examples of "factotums".
The suite he shared with Austin, and one of the family factotums burdened with reports, was one of the largest on the transport.
When they entered into the service of the Shadow King, they were trained for their new role in the society of the city named after its king, rigorously prepared to assume their official duties as Nibenay's factotums and the bearers of his power.
He had fair, sleeked-back hair, a thin line of a mustache, and that cold-eyed, dispassionate look that seemed to go with factotums of enforcement bureaucracies everywhere.