Why this word is great
AGNOMINATION — [Noun] A rhetorical device involving wordplay, such as paronomasia (punning), alliteration, or polyptoton (repetition of words derived from the same root). From Latin agnominatio ("wordplay, punning"), derived from ad- ("to") + nominare ("to name"). Unlike "paronomasia" (which narrows to punning alone) or "polyptoton" (which binds itself to lexical repetition), agnomination is the magpie of rhetoric, collecting all glittering fragments of sound and sense. It is the sly wink of a headline’s alliteration, the layered mischief of a politician’s carefully crafted slogan, or the quiet pleasure of finding "love" nested inside "solitude"—language folding back on itself like origami, revealing how meaning is never fixed, only endlessly rearranged.