Why this word is great
CONCIONATOR — [Noun] A haranguer of the people; a preacher. From Latin concionator ("public speaker, orator"), from concionari ("to harangue, address an assembly"), derived from contio ("assembly, meeting"). Unlike "orator" (which suggests polished eloquence) or "lecturer" (which implies dispassionate instruction), a concionator is a creature of urgency and fire. It is the street-corner prophet with a voice like gravel and scripture on his tongue, the revolutionary leaning from a balcony to whip the crowd into frenzy, the tent-revivalist whose sweat-drenched brow glows under the flicker of gaslight—each a reminder that words, when wielded like a hammer, can break as much as they build.