The word "civilservant" is translated from the foreign language "civil servant or civilservice". English originally meant "civil servant" and "civil servant". Some people translate it as "servant of the Queen", some as "civil servant" or "civil service system", and some as "civil servant". Maybe this translation is more in line with the original intention.
The United States is called "government employee"; Japan was called "civil servant" before World War II, and changed its name to "civil servant" after the war; France is directly called "civil servant"; The Federal Republic of Germany is called a "federal civil servant" or a "federal official". In today's world, many developed countries and some developing countries have followed the example of Britain and the United States and established their own civil service systems, calling those who engage in official activities in the government "civil servants".