: a condition in which one lacks liberty especially to determine one's course of action or way of life
2
: a right by which something (such as a piece of land) owned by one person is subject to a specified use or enjoyment by another
Did you know?
Servitude is slavery or anything resembling it. The entire black population of colonial America lived in permanent servitude. And millions of the whites who populated this country arrived in "indentured servitude", obliged to pay off the cost of their journey with several years of labor. Servitude comes in many forms, of course: in the bad old days of the British navy, it was said that the difference between going to sea and going to jail was that you were less likely to drown in jail.
the Fugitive Slave Act had the effect of returning enslaved people who had made it to freedom in the North to a brutal life of servitude in the South
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The daughter of a gentleman and a maid, Sophie was orphaned at a young age and forced into servitude by her own father’s wife, the staggeringly bitter and petty Lady Araminta Gun (Katie Leung).—Kate Erbland, IndieWire, 26 Feb. 2026 On the one hand, Lady Penwood has tormented Sophie since her father’s death, denying her parentage, forcing her into servitude, and working her to the bone.—Roxana Hadadi, Vulture, 19 Feb. 2026 Colorado Department of Corrections officials forced inmates to work prison jobs through coercion that ultimately amounted to involuntary servitude, a Denver judge ruled Friday.—Shelly Bradbury, Denver Post, 16 Feb. 2026 Voters overwhelmingly abolished slavery and involuntary servitude in prisons in 2018.—Austen Erblat, CBS News, 16 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for servitude
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, "slavery, bondage, feudal allegiance," borrowed from Anglo-French & Late Latin; Anglo-French servitute, borrowed from Late Latin servitūdin-, servitūdō "condition of being a slave," from Latin servus "slave" + -i--i- + -tūdin-, -tūdō-tude — more at serve entry 1
: a condition in which an individual lacks liberty especially to determine his or her course of action or way of life
specifically: the state of being a slave
involuntary servitude
2
: a right by which property owned by one person is subject to a specified use or enjoyment of another—used chiefly in the civil law of Louisiana see also dominant estate and servient estate at estatesense 4 compare easement
—apparent servitude
: a predial servitude whose existence is perceivable by exterior signs or works (as an aqueduct or road) on the property
—legal servitude
: a predial servitude that is created by a limitation under the law on the use of the property
—natural servitude
: a predial servitude that arises from the situation of the estates (as from one being situated downhill from another)
—personal servitude
: a servitude that burdens property in favor of a specific named person see also right of use, usufruct
—predial servitude
: a servitude that burdens one item of immovable property (as a tract of land) in favor of another
Note:
A predial servitude is transferred along with the ownership of the dominant estate, and the servient estate is always taken subject to the servitude. A predial servitude cannot be transferred separately from the dominant estate.