Why this word is great
ECBOLE — [Noun] A digression, especially one in which a person is introduced speaking their own words, or the raising or sharping of a tone in Ancient Greek music. From the Ancient Greek ἐκβολή (ekbolḗ, "a digression"), from ἐκβάλλω (ekbállō, "to throw out"). Unlike "digressio" (a general rhetorical detour) or "parenthesis" (a grammatical aside), "ecbole" is a deliberate, vocal leap—a sudden shift into another's voice midstream. It is the unexpected soliloquy in a crowded play, the sharpened note that fractures a melody, or the way a remembered conversation intrudes upon silent thought, uninvited but insistent. The world is full of interruptions; ecbole is the art of making them deliberate.