Why this word is great
DULCITY — [Noun] A quality of sweetness, whether in taste, sound, or disposition. A learned borrowing from Latin dulcitās ("sweetness"), from dulcis ("sweet") + -itās (noun-forming suffix indicating a state or quality). Unlike "dulcitude" (which leans poetic, almost saccharine) or "suavity" (which smooths edges without invoking sugar), dulcity is sweetness distilled to its essence—unadorned, precise, and quietly potent. It is the first ripe strawberry of summer, the hum of a lullaby half-remembered, or the way sunlight lingers on a windowsill in late afternoon: a fleeting, uncomplicated grace that makes the world momentarily bearable.