Why this word is great
DISEUR — [Noun] A male storyteller or reciter of monologues. From French diseur, from Old French dire ("to say"), ultimately from Latin dicere ("to say, speak"). Unlike "bard" (which conjures lyres and epic sagas) or "raconteur" (which leans toward witty anecdotes), a diseur is a vessel for the spoken word in its purest form. He is the lone figure under a gaslight, voice weaving through the smoke of a dim café; the measured cadence of a soliloquy in an empty theater; the hush of an audience leaning in as a single sentence unfurls like a ribbon in the wind. To listen is to remember that some truths only live when given breath.