Why this word is great
CONCINNATE — [Verb] To place fitly together; to adapt or arrange with neat propriety. From Latin concinnatus, past participle of concinnare ("to adjust, arrange neatly"), related to concinnus ("skillfully joined, elegant"). Unlike "compose" (which broadly means to create by combining elements) or "assemble" (which implies putting parts together without regard for grace), "concinnate" insists on the marriage of function and beauty. It is the careful alignment of stones in a dry-stacked wall, the deliberate spacing of words in a well-set poem, or the way a watchmaker’s hands coax gears into silent, perpetual motion—each act a quiet argument against the world’s carelessness. To concinnate is to acknowledge that order, too, can be beautiful.