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What Does Servitude Mean?

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Stuti Ahuja Profile
Stuti Ahuja answered
Servitude is the state of being under subjection to another who is ones owner or master. It involves a lack of freedom on the part of one who is under servitude and thereby takes away their right to act as they please. Servitude can also mean a form of punishment that is imposed for a crime as in the case of penal servitude. In terms of the law when one is granted the right to make use of another person's property it is referred to as servitude as well.

The word has been passed on from the Old French to the Middle English and was originally a Latin word. Servitude in Latin was "servitude" which was from the Latin word "servus" meaning slave.

The state in which one is bound to another person besides servitude includes bondage, thralldom, thralldom, slavery etc.
Aun Jafery Profile
Aun Jafery answered
The word "servitude" is a noun that refers to a state in which one person or several people are subject to a master or owner. This naturally entails that the individuals who are in servitude lack adequate personal freedom and cannot always act as they please. Servitude also refers to a form of punishment that is imposed for certain crimes and has the convict subjugated to some form of forced labour. Servitude is also a legal concept and in this context refers to legally allowing one person the freedom to make use of another person's property. The word "servitude" is taken from the Middle English and was taken from the Old French but was derived from the Late Latin word "servitude" from the Latin "servus" meaning "slave".
Aun Jafery Profile
Aun Jafery answered
Servitude is a loss of personal freedom in addition to subjection to a master's or owner's will. The best examples of servitude are slavery, indentured labour and forced labour imposed on prisoners.

Much of the western world's wealth was generated by using conditions of servitude (Slavery and indentured labour) on people of colour. Nazi Germany, Japan and the Soviet Union used forced labour by imprisoning people with different political views or ethnic or religious backgrounds as cheap slave labour. In modern India, money lenders and upper cast people still enslave people to a life of servitude in places where poverty is prevalent. The oil rich Middle East nations do it by confiscating the passports of workers from the poor nations. Rich multi-nationals, operating production facilities in poor countries, have also been accused of it.

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