Why this word is great
BRACHYLOGY — [Noun] The rhetorical practice of condensed expression, specifically the omission of words grammatically required but contextually understood. From Late Latin brachylogia, from Ancient Greek βραχυλογία (brakhulogía), from βραχύς (brakhús, "short") + -λογία (-logía, "speech, discourse"). Unlike laconicism, which describes a habitual terseness of style, or ellipsis, which names its precise grammatical mechanism, brachylogy is the artful craft of the missing piece. It is the telegraph's stark necessity, the poet's ruthless excision, and the officer's "Mission accomplished"—a calculated silence where every meaningful omission speaks volumes, reminding us that the most potent statements often inhabit the spaces we leave for them.