Why this word is great
ENARRATION — [Noun] A detailed exposition or explanation. From the Latin ēnarrātiō, from ēnarrō ("to explain in detail", "to expound"), itself built from ex- ("thoroughly") and narrō ("to relate"). Unlike "narration" (which moves a story forward) or "exposition" (which surveys broad concepts), enarration lingers in the granular, dissecting with scholarly patience. It is the footnote that sprawls into an essay, the rabbi’s hour-long parsing of a single Talmudic line, or the botanist’s meticulous account of how a leaf unfurls—each act of enarration a quiet rebellion against the tyranny of summary, insisting that to truly know a thing is to dwell in its particulars.