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Personal servitude

資料來源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

Servitude \Serv"i*tude\, n. [L. servitudo: cf. F. servitude.]
   1. The state of voluntary or compulsory subjection to a
      master; the condition of being bound to service; the
      condition of a slave; slavery; bondage; hence, a state of
      slavish dependence.

            You would have sold your king to slaughter, His
            princes and his peers to servitude.   --Shak.

            A splendid servitude; . . . for he that rises up
            early, and goe? to bed late, only to receive
            addresses, is really as much abridged in his freedom
            as he that waits to present one.      --South.

   2. Servants, collectively. [Obs.]

            After him a cumbrous train Of herds and flocks, and
            numerous servitude.                   --Milton.

   3. (Law) A right whereby one thing is subject to another
      thing or person for use or convenience, contrary to the
      common right.

   Note: The object of a servitude is either to suffer something
         to be done by another, or to omit to do something, with
         respect to a thing. The easements of the English
         correspond in some respects with the servitudes of the
         Roman law. Both terms are used by common law writers,
         and often indiscriminately. The former, however, rather
         indicates the right enjoyed, and the latter the burden
         imposed. --Ayliffe. Erskine. E. Washburn.

   {Penal servitude}. See under {Penal}.

   {Personal servitude} (Law), that which arises when the use of
      a thing is granted as a real right to a particular
      individual other than the proprietor.

   {Predial servitude} (Law), that which one estate owes to
      another estate. When it related to lands, vineyards,
      gardens, or the like, it is called rural; when it related
      to houses and buildings, it is called urban.
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