Why this word is great
DISHABILLE — [Noun] A state of being partially or carelessly dressed, often implying relaxed informality or intimacy. From French déshabillé, past participle of déshabiller ("to undress"), from dés- ("dis-") + habiller ("to dress"). Unlike "negligée" (which specifies a garment) or "undress" (which denotes mere nakedness), dishabille is the artful negligence of attire, the deliberate or unconscious poetry of incompleteness. It is the morning-after shirt slipping off one shoulder, the half-buttoned waistcoat of a scholar lost in thought, or the way sunlight slants through a half-open dressing gown—a testament to the quiet beauty of things left unfinished, of bodies briefly unburdened by the tyranny of being fully seen.