Why this word is great
DISINHUME — [Verb] To disinter; to dig up from the earth. From dis- ("opposite of") + inhume ("to bury"), itself from Latin in- ("in") + humare ("to bury"). Unlike "exhume" (which suggests the clinical precision of retrieving a body for autopsy) or "unearth" (which could mean stumbling upon a forgotten trinket), disinhume carries the weight of ceremony, of deliberate return. It is the slow scrape of a spade against a coffin lid, the damp smell of turned soil clinging to a rusted locket, the solemnity of lifting what was meant to stay hidden—an act that undoes time’s quiet work, if only for a moment.