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.

Serviture
(Serv"i*ture) n. Servants, collectively. [Obs.]

Servitute
(Serv"i*tute) n. [L. servitus.] Servitude. [Obs.]

Serye
(Se"rye) n. A series. [Obs.] Chaucer.

Sesame
(Ses"a*me) n. [L. sesamum, sesama, Gr. : cf. F. sésame.] (Bot.) Either of two annual herbaceous plants of the genus Sesamum (S. Indicum, and S. orientale), from the seeds of which an oil is expressed; also, the small obovate, flattish seeds of these plants, sometimes used as food. See Benne.

Open Sesame, the magical command which opened the door of the robber's den in the Arabian Nights' tale of "The Forty Thieves;" hence, a magical password.Sesame grass. (Bot.) Same as Gama grass.

Sesamoid
(Ses"a*moid) a. [Gr. like sesame; sesame + form: cf. F. sésamoïde.]

1. Resembling in shape the seeds of sesame.

2. (Anat.) Of or pertaining to the sesamoid bones or cartilages; sesamoidal.

Sesamoid bones, Sesamoid cartilages(Anat.), small bones or cartilages formed in tendons, like the patella and pisiform in man.

Sesamoid
(Ses"a*moid), n. (Anat.) A sesamoid bone or cartilage.

Sesamoidal
(Ses`a*moid"al) a. (Anat.) Sesamoid.

Sesban
(Ses"ban) n. [F., fr. Ar. saisaban, seiseban, a kind of tree, fr. Per. sisaban seed of cinquefoil.] (Bot.) A leguminous shrub (Sesbania aculeata) which furnishes a fiber used for making ropes.

The name is applied also to the similar plant, Sesbania Ægyptiaca, and other species of the same genus.

Sesqui-
(||Ses`qui-) [L., one half more, one and a half.] (Chem.) A combining form (also used adjectively) denoting that three atoms or equivalents of the substance to the name of which it is prefixed are combined with two of some other element or radical; as, sesquibromide, sesquicarbonate, sesquichloride, sesquioxide.

Sesquidupli- is sometimes, but rarely, used in the same manner to denote the proportions of two and a half to one, or rather of five to two.

Sesquialter
(Ses`qui*al"ter) a. Sesquialteral.

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.

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.


  By PanEris using Melati.

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