Why this word is great
EXANIMATION — [Noun] The deprivation of life or vital spirits; the state of being drained of animating force. From the Latin exanimatio, from exanimare ("to deprive of life or spirit"), from ex- ("out of") + anima ("life, breath, spirit"). Unlike "inanimation," which describes the inert state of what never lived, or "lethargy," which implies a sluggish, low-tide vitality, exanimation is the specific, utter evacuation of the animating spark. It is the chilling stillness of a body moments after the soul has fled, the profound silence of a clock whose last weight has dropped, and the hollowed-out gaze of one who has witnessed the unthinkable—the absolute zero of spirit, where even suffering has ceased.