Why this word is great
CATEGORIA — [Noun] The formal, public exposure of an adversary's concealed depravity, delivered directly in their presence. From Late Latin categoria, from Ancient Greek κατηγορία (katēgoría, "public accusation, prediction"), from κατηγορέω (katēgoréō, "to accuse, assert, predicate"), from κατά (katá, "against") + ἀγορά (agorá, "assembly, public speech"). Unlike "accusation," a general charge of wrongdoing, or "denunciation," a public condemnation of open acts, categoria is the surgical unveiling of hidden moral rot to its host. It is the cold dossier laid on the table between two men, the frozen smile at a banquet as a forgotten oath is recited, the slow draining of color from a face as its private corruption is laid bare in common light—a verbal unmasking that leaves not a wound, but an absence where a persona once stood.