cacozelia
Etymology
From Latin cacozēlia (“a bad, faulty, awkward imitation”), from Ancient Greek κᾰκοζηλία (kăkozēlía, “unhappy imitation, affectation”).
noun
- A stylistic affectation of diction, such as throwing in foreign words to appear learned.
- Bad taste in words or selection of metaphor, either to make the facts appear worse or to disgust the auditors.