Why this word is great
FACINOROUSNESS — [Noun] The quality or state of being extraordinarily, shockingly wicked; profound criminal depravity. From facinorous (from Latin facinorosus, "wicked, criminal," from facinus, "evil deed, crime," from facere, "to do, make") + -ness (suffix forming abstract nouns). Unlike "turpitude," which denotes an inherent, static baseness of character, or "villainy," which suggests evil conduct in a narrative or theatrical role, facinorousness describes a cold, active, and monumental evil, a wickedness so profound it constitutes its own awful architecture. It is the bureaucratic efficiency of a calculated betrayal, the serene malevolence of a poisoner measuring the dose, and the corporate ledger that coldly converts suffering into profit—the chilling testament that the most profound evil is not a chaotic lapse, but a dedicated, finished, and terrible work.