## Desuetude: Death by Neglect
**Desuetude** is the state of being disused — specifically, the condition of a law, custom, or practice that has quietly ceased to function without anyone bothering to formally abolish it. It is death by neglect rather than execution, and English borrowed a dedicated Latin word for it because the phenomenon is surprisingly common and legally consequential.
The word comes from Latin **dēsuētūdō**, built with characteristic Roman precision:
- **dē-** — 'away from, un-' (reversal prefix) - **suēscere** — 'to become accustomed' (inchoative verb) - **-tūdō** — abstract noun suffix (like English '-tude')
So *dēsuētūdō* literally means 'the state of having become un-accustomed.' The base verb **suēscere** is the inchoative ('beginning to') form of **suēre** ('to be accustomed'), which connects to the deep PIE reflexive pronoun **\*swé** ('self'). The semantic logic: what is 'one's own' becomes 'what one is used to' becomes 'custom.' Add the reversal prefix *dē-* and you
### The *swé Family: Self → Custom → Ethics
The PIE reflexive **\*swé** is one of the oldest and most fundamental words we can reconstruct. Its descendants span an astonishing range:
**Via Latin *suēscere*:** - **desuetude** — loss of custom - **custom** — from Latin *consuētūdō* ('becoming accustomed together'), via Anglo-Norman - **consuetude** — rare English synonym for 'custom' - **mansuetude** — gentleness (literally 'accustomed to the hand' — i.e. tamed)
**Via Latin *suus* ('one's own'):** - **suicide** — killing of oneself - **per se** — by itself
**Via Greek *éthos* (ἔθος, 'custom, character'):** - **ethics** — the study of character and right conduct - **ethos** — the characteristic spirit of a culture
**Via Germanic:** - **self** — Old English *self*, from Proto-Germanic *\*selbaz*
The family reveals a profound ancient intuition: that selfhood, habit, custom, and moral character are all facets of the same concept. What is 'your own' becomes 'what you are used to' becomes 'how you characteristically behave' becomes 'ethics.' And *desuetude* is what happens when that chain breaks.
Desuetude is more than a literary word — it is a **legal doctrine** with real consequences. The question: can a law die simply because no one enforces it?
**Scots law** says yes. Scotland formally recognizes the doctrine of desuetude: a statute that has gone unenforced for a prolonged period, and which is inconsistent with current practice, may be treated as void. This was confirmed in cases like *Brown v. Magistrates of Edinburgh* (1931), where century-old statutes were held to have lapsed through disuse.
**English common law** traditionally says no — a statute remains valid until Parliament repeals it, regardless of how long it has been ignored. This has produced some famous oddities: technically unrepealed medieval statutes about crossbow ownership, archery practice requirements, and the wearing of armour in Parliament.
**American law** is mixed. Some state courts have applied desuetude docially; the U.S. Supreme Court in *District of Columbia v. Heller* (2008) noted that desuetude is not a recognized defence in federal law, but several state courts — particularly in West Virginia — have accepted it.
There is an irony at the heart of this word: *desuetude* itself has repeatedly approached the condition it describes. It has never been common in English — first attested around 1430, it has always been a word of law, philosophy, and elevated prose. Every generation of lexicographers debates whether it is still alive or merely preserved in dictionaries like a statute no one enforces.
And yet it keeps being revived, precisely because no other English word does quite what it does. 'Obsolescence' is close but implies replacement by something newer. 'Disuse' is flat and generic. *Desuetude* captures something specific: the slow, quiet death of a practice that was never formally killed — a process as common in language, culture, and institutions