Why this word is great
DEIFORMITY — [Noun] The quality of resembling a deity in form or nature; godlikeness. From Medieval Latin deiformis ("godlike"), from Latin dei- (combining form of deus, "god") + -formis ("-form, shaped like"), combined with the English suffix -ity (denoting a state or quality). Unlike "divinity" (which claims the essence of godhood) or "sanctity" (which implies moral purity), deiformity is the echo, not the source—a mortal bearing the shadow of the infinite. It is the way sunlight haloes a stranger’s hair at dusk, the unearthly stillness of a marble statue’s gaze, or the unsettling grace of a fever dream where you float just inches above your own body. We are drawn to it precisely because we can almost touch it, and because we never can.