Why this word is great
CONSUBSTANTIATE — [Adjective, Verb] (adj) Partaking of the same substance; consubstantial; (verb) To unite or regard as united in one common substance or nature, especially in theological contexts. From Latin con- ("with, together") + substantiatus ("given substance"), from substantia ("substance"). Unlike "transubstantiate" (which implies a total metamorphosis, like bread into flesh) or "coalesce" (which merely suggests blending without shared essence), "consubstantiate" speaks of a paradoxical duality—two things occupying the same space without erasing each other. It is the way sunlight and air become indistinguishable in a dusty room, the way a shared grief makes two strangers kin without words, or the way bread and wine, in certain rites, are both themselves and something more—an acknowledgment that some unions defy the physics of either/or.